Genes regulated by peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma agonist

ABSTRACT

The present invention relates to a combination comprising a plurality of cDNAs which are differentially expressed in response to peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARγ) agonist and which may be used entirely or in part to diagnose, to stage, to treat, or to monitor the progression or treatment of disorders such as diabetes mellitus, obesity, hypertension, atherosclerosis, polycystic ovarian syndrome, and cancers of the breast, prostate, or colon.

[0001] This application claims benefit of provisional application Serial No. 60/308,868, filed Jul. 30, 2001.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

[0002] The present invention relates to a combination comprising a plurality of cDNAs which are differentially expressed in response to peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARγ) agonist and which may be used entirely or in part to diagnose, to stage, to treat, or to monitor the progression or treatment of disorders such as diabetes mellitus, obesity, hypertension, atherosclerosis, polycystic ovarian syndrome, and cancers including those of the breast, prostate, and colon.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

[0003] Thiazolidinediones (TZDs) act as agonists for the peroxisome-proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARγ), a member of the nuclear hormone receptor superfamily. TZDs reduce hyperglycemia, hyperinsulinemia, and hypertension, in part by promoting glucose metabolism and inhibiting gluconeogenesis. Roles for PPARγ and its agonists have been demonstrated in a wide range of pathological conditions including diabetes, obesity, hypertension, atherosclerosis, polycystic ovarian syndrome, and cancers such as breast, prostate, and colon cancer and liposarcoma.

[0004] The mechanism by which TZDs and other PPARγ agonists enhance insulin sensitivity is not fully understood, but it may involve the ability of PPARγ to promote adipogenesis. When ectopically expressed in cultured preadipocytes, PPARγ is a potent inducer of adipocyte differentiation. TZDs, in combination with insulin and other factors, can also enhance differentiation of human preadipocytes in culture (Adams et al. (1997) J Clin Invest 100:3149-3153). The relative potency of different TZDs in promoting adipogenesis in vitro is proportional to both their insulin sensitizing effects in vivo and their ability to bind and activate PPARγ in vitro. Since adipocytes derived from omental adipose depots are refractory to the effects of TZDs, it has been suggested that the insulin-sensitizing effects of TZDs may result from their ability to promote adipogenesis in subcutaneous adipose depots (Adams, supra). Further, dominant negative mutations in the PPARγ gene have been identified in two non-obese subjects with severe insulin resistance, hypertension, and overt non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM; Barroso et al. (1998) Nature 402:880-883).

[0005] NIDDM is the most common form of diabetes mellitus, a chronic metabolic disease that affects 143 million people worldwide. NIDDM is characterized by abnormal glucose and lipid metabolism that result from a combination of peripheral insulin resistance and defective insulin secretion. NIDDM has a complex, progressive etiology and a high degree of heritability. Numerous complications of diabetes including heart disease, stroke, renal failure, retinopathy, and peripheral neuropathy contribute to the high rate of morbidity and mortality.

[0006] At the molecular level, PPARγ functions as a ligand-activated transcription factor. In the presence of ligand, PPARγ forms a heterodimer with the retinoid X receptor (RXR) which then activates transcription of target genes containing one or more copies of a PPARγ response element (PPRE). Many genes important in lipid storage and metabolism contain PPREs and have been identified as PPARγ targets, including PEPCK, aP2, LPL, ACS, and FAT-P (Auwerx (1999) Diabetologia 42:1033-1049). Multiple ligands for PPARγ have been identified. These include a variety of fatty acid metabolites; synthetic drugs belonging to the TZD class, such as pioglitazone and rosiglitazone (BRL49653); and certain non-glitazone tyrosine analogs such as G1262570 and GW1929. The prostaglandin derivative, 15-dPGJ2, is a potent endogenous ligand for PPARγ.

[0007] Expression of PPARγ is very high in adipose but barely detectable in skeletal muscle, the primary site for insulin-stimulated glucose disposal in the body. PPARγ is also moderately expressed in large intestine, kidney, liver, vascular smooth muscle, hematopoietic cells, and macrophages. The high expression of PPARγ in adipose suggests that the insulin sensitizing effects of TZDs may result from alterations in the expression of one or more PPARγ regulated genes in adipose tissue. Identification of PPARγ target genes will contribute to better drug design and the development of novel therapeutic strategies for diabetes, obesity, and other conditions.

[0008] Systematic attempts to identify PPARγ target genes have been made in several rodent models of obesity and diabetes (Suzuki et al. (2000) Jpn J Pharmacol 84:113-23; Way et al. (2001) Endocrinology 142:1269-1277). However, a serious drawback of rodent gene expression studies is that significant differences exist between human and rodent models of adipogenesis, diabetes, and obesity (Taylor (1999) Cell 97:9-12; Gregoire et al. (1998) Physiol Reviews 78:783-809). Therefore, an unbiased approach to identifying TZD regulated genes in primary cultures of human tissues is necessary to fully elucidate the molecular basis for diseases associated with PPARγ activity.

[0009] Array technology can provide a simple way to explore the expression of a single polymorphic gene or the expression profile of a large number of related or unrelated genes. When the expression of a single gene is examined, arrays are employed to detect the expression of that specific gene or its variants. When an expression profile is examined, arrays provide a platform for examining which genes are tissue specific, carrying out housekeeping functions, parts of a signaling cascade, or specifically related to a particular genetic predisposition, condition, disease, or disorder. The potential application of gene expression profiling is particularly relevant to improving diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment of disease. For example, both the levels and sequences expressed in samples from subjects with diabetes may be compared with the levels and sequences expressed in normal sample.

[0010] The present invention provides for a combination comprising a plurality of cDNAs for use in detecting changes in expression of genes encoding proteins that are associated with response to PPARγ agonist. Such a combination satisfies a need in the art by providing a set of differentially expressed genes which may be used entirely or in part to diagnose, to stage, to treat, or to monitor the progression or treatment of disorders such as diabetes mellitus, obesity, hypertension, atherosclerosis, polycystic ovarian syndrome, and cancers including those of the breast, prostate, and colon.

SUMMARY

[0011] The present invention provides a combination comprising a plurality of cDNAs and their complements which are differentially expressed in adipose treated with a PPARγ agonist and which are selected from SEQ ID NOs:1-55 as presented in the Sequence Listing. In one embodiment, each cDNA is upregulated in response to PPARγ agonist in adipocytes from both normal and obese subjects, SEQ ID NOs:1-3 and 52; in another embodiment, each cDNA is downregulated in response to PPARγ agonist in adipocytes from both normal and obese subjects, SEQ ID NOs:4-25 and 53-54; in yet another embodiment, each cDNA is differentially regulated in response to PPARγ agonist in adipocytes from normal subjects relative to obese subjects, SEQ ID NOs:26-51. In one aspect, the combination is useful to diagnose or monitor a disorder selected from diabetes mellitus, obesity, hypertension, atherosclerosis, polycystic ovarian syndrome, and cancers of the breast, prostate, or colon. In another aspect, the combination is immobilized on a substrate.

[0012] The invention also provides a high throughput method to detect differential expression of one or more of the cDNAs of the combination. The method comprises hybridizing the substrate comprising the combination with the nucleic acids of a sample, thereby forming one or more hybridization complexes, detecting the hybridization complexes, and comparing the hybridization complexes with those of a standard, wherein differences in the size and signal intensity of each hybridization complex indicates differential expression of nucleic acids in the sample. In one aspect, the sample is from a subject with diabetes and differential expression determines an early, mid, and late stage of that disorder.

[0013] The invention further provides a high throughput method of screening a library or a plurality of molecules or compounds to identify a ligand. The method comprises combining the substrate comprising the combination with a library or a plurality of molecules or compounds under conditions to allow specific binding and detecting specific binding, thereby identifying a ligand. The library or plurality of molecules or compounds are selected from DNA molecules, enhancers, mimetics, peptide nucleic acids, proteins, repressors, regulatory proteins, RNA molecules, and transcription factors. The invention additionally provides a method for purifying a ligand, the method comprising combining a cDNA of the invention with a sample under conditions which allow specific binding, recovering the bound cDNA, and separating the cDNA from the ligand, thereby obtaining purified ligand.

[0014] The invention still further provides an isolated cDNA selected from SEQ ID NOs:1, 29, 31, 32, 35, and 39-51 as presented in the Sequence Listing or the complements thereof. The invention also provides a vector comprising the cDNA, a host cell comprising the vector, and a method for producing a protein comprising culturing the host cell under conditions for the expression of a protein and recovering the protein from the host cell culture.

[0015] The present invention provides a purified protein encoded and produced by a cDNA of the invention. The invention also provides a high-throughput method for using a protein to screen a library or a plurality of molecules or compounds to identify a ligand. The method comprises combining the protein or a portion thereof with the library or plurality of molecules or compounds under conditions to allow specific binding and detecting specific binding, thereby identifying a ligand which specifically binds the protein. The library or plurality of molecules or compounds is selected from agonists, antagonists, antibodies, DNA molecules, small molecule drugs, immunoglobulins, inhibitors, mimetics, peptide nucleic acids, peptides, pharmaceutical agents, proteins, RNA molecules, and ribozymes. The invention further provides a method for using a protein to purify a ligand. The method comprises combining the protein or a portion thereof with a sample under conditions to allow specific binding, recovering the bound protein, and separating the protein from the ligand, thereby obtaining purified ligand. The invention still further provides a method for using the protein to produce an antibody. The method comprises immunizing an animal with the protein or an antigenic determinant thereof under conditions to elicit an antibody response, isolating animal antibodies, and screening the isolated antibodies with the protein to identify an antibody which specifically binds the protein. The invention yet still further provides a method for using the protein to purify antibodies which bind specifically to the protein.

[0016] The invention provides a purified antibody. The invention also provides a method of using an antibody to detect the expression of a protein in a sample, the method comprising contacting the antibody with a sample under conditions for the formation of an antibody:protein complex and detecting complex formation wherein the formation of the complex indicates the expression of the protein in the sample. In one aspect, complex formation is compared to standards and is diagnostic of disorders such as diabetes mellitus, obesity, hypertension, atherosclerosis, polycystic ovarian syndrome, and cancers including those of the breast, prostate, and colon. The invention further provides using an antibody to immunopurify a protein comprising combining the antibody with a sample under conditions to allow formation of an antibody:protein complex, and separating the antibody from the protein, thereby obtaining purified protein. The invention still further provides a composition comprising a cDNA, a protein, an antibody, or a ligand which has agonistic or antagonistic activity.

DESCRIPTION OF THE SEQUENCE LISTING AND TABLES

[0017] A portion of the disclosure of this patent document contains material that is subject to copyright protection. The copyright owner has no objection to the facsimile reproduction by anyone of the patent document or the patent disclosure, as it appears in the Patent and Trademark Office patent file or records, but otherwise reserves all copyright rights whatsoever.

[0018] The Sequence Listing is a compilation of cDNAs obtained by sequencing and extending clone inserts. Each sequence is identified by a sequence identification number (SEQ ID NO) and by the Incyte template number (INCYT ID NO) from which it was obtained.

[0019] Table 1 lists the differential expression of the cDNAs of the present invention. Column 1 shows the CLONE ID for the clone that represented the cDNA on a microarray. Columns 2, 3, 4 and 5 show the differential expression of each clone in adipocytes obtained from normal donors and treated to PPARγ agonist for 1, 2, 8 and 15 days, respectively. Column 6 shows the differential expression of the clone averaged over columns 2-5. Columns 7, 8, 9, and 10 show the differential expression of each clone in adipocytes obtained from obese donors and treated to PPARγ agonist for 1, 2, 8 and 15 days, respectively. Column 11 shows the differential expression of the clone averaged over columns 7-10. Each value represents PPARγ agonist treated adipocytes relative to untreated, time-matched controls. Values are in log base 2; negative values indicate downregulation.

[0020] Table 2 shows the region of each cDNA encompassed by the clone present on a microarray and identified as differentially expressed. Columns 1 and 2 show the SEQ ID NO and TEMPLATE ID, respectively, of the cDNA. Column 3 shows the CLONE ID and columns 4 and 5 show the first residue (START) and last residue (STOP) encompassed by the clone on the template.

[0021] Table 3 lists the functional annotation of the cDNAs of the present invention. Columns 1, 2, and 3 show the SEQ ID NO, TEMPLATE ID, and CLONE ID, respectively. Columns 4, 5, and 6 show the GenBank hit (GENBANK ID), probability score (E-value), and functional annotation, respectively, as determined by BLAST analysis (version 2.0 using default parameters; Altschul et al. (1997) Nucleic Acids Res 25:3389-3402) of the cDNA against GenBank (release 122; National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI), Bethesda Md.).

DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

[0022] Definitions

[0023] “Antibody” refers to intact immunoglobulin molecule, a polyclonal antibody, a monoclonal antibody, a chimeric antibody, a recombinant antibody, a humanized antibody, single chain antibodies, a Fab fragment, an F(ab′)₂ fragment, an Fv fragment; and an antibody-peptide fusion protein.

[0024] “Antigenic determinant” refers to an antigenic or immunogenic epitope, structural feature, or region of an oligopeptide, peptide, or protein which is capable of inducing formation of an antibody which specifically binds the protein. Biological activity is not a prerequisite for immunogenicity.

[0025] “Array” refers to an ordered arrangement of at least two cDNAs, proteins, or antibodies on a substrate. At least one of the cDNAs, proteins, or antibodies represents a control or standard, and the other cDNA, protein, or antibody of diagnostic or therapeutic interest. The arrangement of at least two and up to about 40,000 cDNAs, proteins, or antibodies on the substrate assures that the size and signal intensity of each labeled complex, formed between each cDNA and at least one nucleic acid, each protein and at least one ligand or antibody, or each antibody and at least one protein to which the antibody specifically binds, is individually distinguishable.

[0026] A “combination” comprises at least two and up to about 110 sequences selected from the group consisting of SEQ ID NOs:1-55 and their complements as presented in the Sequence Listing.

[0027] The “complement” of a nucleic acid of the Sequence Listing refers to a nucleotide sequence which is completely complementary over the full length of the sequence and which will hybridize to the nucleic acid under conditions of high stringency.

[0028] “cDNA” refers to an isolated polynucleotide, nucleic acid, or a fragment thereof, that contains from about 400 to about 5,000 nucleotides. It may have originated recombinantly or synthetically, may be double-stranded or single-stranded, represents coding and noncoding 3′ or 5′ sequence, generally lacks introns and may be purified or combined with carbohydrate, lipids, protein or other organic or inorganic elements or substances.

[0029] The phrase “cDNA encoding a protein” refers to a nucleic acid whose sequence closely aligns with sequences that encode conserved regions, motifs or domains identified by employing analyses well known in the art. These analyses include BLAST (Basic Local Alignment Search Tool; Altschul (1993) J Mol Evol 36:290-300; Altschul et al. (1990) J Mol Biol 215:403-410) and BLAST2 (Altschul et al. (1997) Nucleic Acids Res 25:3389-3402) which provide identity within the conserved region. Brenner et al. (1998; Proc Natl Acad Sci 95:6073-6078) who analyzed BLAST for its ability to identify structural homologs by sequence identity found 30% identity is a reliable threshold for sequence alignments of at least 150 residues and 40% is a reasonable threshold for alignments of at least 70 residues (Brenner, page 6076, column 2).

[0030] A “composition” refers to the polynucleotide and a labeling moiety; a purified protein and a pharmaceutical carrier or a heterologous, labeling or purification moiety; an antibody and a labeling moiety or pharmaceutical agent; and the like.

[0031] “Derivative” refers to a cDNA or a protein that has been subjected to a chemical modification. Derivatization of a cDNA can involve substitution of a nontraditional base such as queosine or of an analog such as hypoxanthine. These substitutions are well known in the art. Derivatization of a protein involves the replacement of a hydrogen by an acetyl, acyl, alkyl, amino, formyl, or morpholino group. Derivative molecules retain the biological activities of the naturally occurring molecules but may confer longer lifespan or enhanced activity.

[0032] “Differential expression” refers to an increased or upregulated or a decreased or downregulated expression as detected by absence, presence, or at least two-fold change in the amount of transcribed messenger RNA or translated protein in a sample.

[0033] “Disorder” refers to conditions, diseases or syndromes including diabetes mellitus, obesity, hypertension, atherosclerosis, polycystic ovarian syndrome, and cancers, particularly of the breast, prostate, and colon.

[0034] An “expression profile” is a representation of gene expression in a sample. A nucleic acid expression profile is produced using sequencing, hybridization, or amplification (quantitative PCR) technologies and mRNAs or cDNAs from a sample. A protein expression profile, although time delayed, mirrors the nucleic acid expression profile and may use antibody or protein arrays, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA), fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS), spatial immobilization including two dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (2D-PAGE), and radioimmunoassays including radiolabeling and quantification using a scintillation counter and western analysis to detect protein expression in a sample. The nucleic acids, proteins, or antibodies may be used in solution or attached to a substrate, and their detection is based on methods and labeling moieties well known in the art.

[0035] “Fragment” refers to a chain of consecutive nucleotides from about 60 to about 700 base pairs in length. Fragments may be used in PCR, hybridization or array technologies to identify related nucleic acids and in binding assays to screen for a ligand useful in regulating replication, transcription or translation.

[0036] A “hybridization complex” is formed between a cDNA and a nucleic acid of a sample when the purines of one molecule hydrogen bond with the pyrimidines of the complementary molecule, e.g., 5′-A-G-T-C-3′ base pairs with 3′-T-C-A-G-5′. The degree of complementarity and the use of nucleotide analogs affect the efficiency and stringency of hybridization reactions.

[0037] “Identity” as applied to sequences, refers to the quantification (usually percentage) of nucleotide or residue matches between at least two sequences aligned using a standardized algorithm such as Smith-Waterman alignment (Smith and Waterman (1981) J Mol Biol 147:195-197), CLUSTALW (Thompson et al. (1994) Nucleic Acids Res 22:4673-4680), or BLAST2 (Altschul et al. (1997). BLAST2 may be used in a standardized and reproducible way to insert gaps in one of the sequences in order to optimize alignment and to achieve a more meaningful comparison between them. “Similarity” as applied to proteins uses the same algorithms but takes into account conservative substitutions of nucleotides or residues.

[0038] “Isolated” or “purified” refers to any molecule or compound that is separated from its natural environment and is from about 60% free to about 90% free from other components with which it is naturally associated.

[0039] “Labeling moiety” refers to any reporter molecule including radionuclides, enzymes, fluorescent, chemiluminescent, or chromogenic agents, substrates, cofactors, inhibitors, or magnetic particles than can be attached to or incorporated into a polynucleotide, protein, or antibody. Visible labels and dyes include but are not limited to anthocyanins, 13 glucuronidase, biotin, BIODIPY, Coomassie blue, Cy3 and Cy5, 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI), digoxigenin, fluorescein, FITC, gold, green fluorescent protein, lissamine, luciferase, phycoerythrin, rhodamine, spyro red, silver, streptavidin, and the like. Radioactive markers include radioactive forms of hydrogen, iodine, phosphorous, sulfur, and the like.

[0040] “Ligand” refers to any agent, molecule, or compound which will bind specifically to a complementary site on a cDNA molecule or polynucleotide, or to an epitope or a protein. Such ligands stabilize or modulate the activity of polynucleotides or proteins and may be composed of inorganic or organic substances including nucleic acids, proteins, carbohydrates, fats, and lipids.

[0041] “Oligonucleotide” refers a single stranded molecule from about 18 to about 60 nucleotides in length which may be used in hybridization or amplification technologies or in regulation of replication, transcription or translation. Equivalent terms are applier, primer, and oligomer.

[0042] “Portion” refers to any part of a protein used for any purpose which retains at least one biological or antigenic characteristic of a native protein, but especially, to an epitope for the screening of ligands or for the production of antibodies.

[0043] “Post-translational modification” of a protein can involve lipidation, glycosylation, phosphorylation, acetylation, racemization, proteolytic cleavage, and the like. These processes may occur synthetically or biochemically. Biochemical modifications will vary by cellular location, cell type, pH, enzymatic milieu, and the like.

[0044] “Probe” refers to a cDNA that hybridizes to at least one nucleic acid in a sample. Where targets are single stranded, probes are complementary single strands. Probes can be labeled for use in hybridization reactions including Southern, northern, in situ, dot blot, array, and like technologies or in screening assays.

[0045] “Protein” refers to a polypeptide or any portion thereof. An “oligopeptide” is an amino acid sequence from about five residues to about 15 residues that is used as part of a fusion protein to produce an antibody.

[0046] “Sample” is used in its broadest sense as containing nucleic acids, proteins, and antibodies. A sample may comprise a bodily fluid such as ascites, blood, cerebrospinal fluid, lymph, semen, sputum, urine and the like; the soluble fraction of a cell preparation, or an aliquot of media in which cells were grown; a chromosome, an organelle, or membrane isolated or extracted from a cell; genomic DNA, RNA, or cDNA in solution or bound to a substrate; a cell; a tissue, a tissue biopsy, or a tissue print; buccal cells, skin, hair, a hair follicle; and the like.

[0047] “Specific binding” refers to a special and precise interaction between two molecules which is dependent upon their structure, particularly their molecular side groups. For example, the intercalation of a regulatory protein into the major groove of a DNA molecule, the hydrogen bonding along the backbone between two single stranded nucleic acids, or the binding between an epitope of a protein and an agonist, antagonist, or antibody.

[0048] “Substrate” refers to any rigid or semi-rigid support to which cDNAs or proteins are bound and includes membranes, filters, chips, slides, wafers, fibers, magnetic or nonmagnetic beads, gels, capillaries or other tubing, plates, polymers, and microparticles with a variety of surface forms including wells, trenches, pins, channels and pores.

[0049] A “transcript image” (TI) is a profile of gene transcription activity in a particular tissue at a particular time. TI provides assessment of the relative abundance of expressed polynucleotides in the cDNA libraries of an EST database as described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,840,484, incorporated herein by reference.

[0050] “Variant” refers to molecules that are recognized variations of a cDNA or a protein encoded by the cDNA. Splice variants may be determined by BLAST score, wherein the score is at least 100, and most preferably at least 400. Allelic variants have a high percent identity to the cDNAs and may differ by about three bases per hundred bases. “Single nucleotide polymorphism” (SNP) refers to a change in a single base as a result of a substitution, insertion or deletion. The change may be conservative (purine for purine) or non-conservative (purine to pyrimidine) and may or may not result in a change in an encoded amino acid.

[0051] The Invention

[0052] The present invention provides for a combination comprising a plurality of cDNAs or their complements, SEQ ID NOs:1-55, which may be used to diagnose, to stage, to treat, or to monitor the progression or treatment of a disorder. These cDNAs represent known and novel genes differentially expressed in adipocytes treated with a PPARγ agonist. The combination may be used in its entirety or in part, as subcombinations of cDNAs upregulated in response to PPARγ agonist in adipocytes from both normal and obese subjects, SEQ ID NOs:1-3 and 52; cDNAs downregulated in response to PPARγ agonist in adipocytes from both normal and obese subjects, SEQ ID NOs:4-25 and 53-54; or cDNAs differentially regulated in response to PPARγ agonist in adipocytes from normal subjects relative to obese subjects, SEQ ID NOs:26-51.

[0053] SEQ ID NOs:1, 29, 31, 32, 35, and 39-51 represent novel cDNAs. Since the novel cDNAs were identified solely by their differential expression, it is not essential to know a priori the name, structure, or function of the gene or the encoded protein. The usefulness of the novel cDNAs exists in their immediate value to diagnose or monitor disorders associated with PPARγ signaling such as diabetes mellitus, obesity, hypertension, atherosclerosis, polycystic ovarian syndrome, and cancers including breast, prostate, and colon.

[0054] Table 1 lists the differential expression of the cDNAs of the present invention. Column 1 shows the clone ID for each clone representing a cDNA of the invention on a microarray. Columns 2-5 show the differential expression of each clone in adipocytes obtained from normal donors and treated with PPARγ agonist for 1, 2, 8 and 15 days, respectively. Column 6 shows the differential expression of the clone averaged over columns 2-5. Columns 7-10 show the differential expression of each clone in adipocytes obtained from obese donors and treated to PPARγ agonist for 1, 2, 8 and 15 days, respectively. Column II shows the differential expression of the clone averaged over columns 7-10. Each value represents PPARγ agonist-treated adipocytes relative to untreated, time-matched controls. Values are reported in log base 2; negative values indicate downregulation.

[0055] Table 2 shows the region of each cDNA encompassed by the clone present on a microarray and identified as differentially expressed. Columns 1 and 2 show the SEQ ID NO and Template ID, respectively. Column 3 shows the clone ID and columns 4 and 5 show the first residue (START) and last residue (STOP) encompassed by the clone on the template. Table 3 lists the functional annotation of the cDNAs of the present invention. Columns 1, 2, and 3 show the SEQ ID NO, Template ID, and clone ID, respectively. Columns 4, 5, and 6 show the GenBank hit, probability score (E-value), and functional annotation, respectively, as determined by BLAST analysis (version 2.0 using default parameters; Altschul, supra) of the cDNA against GenBank (release 122; NCBI).

[0056] SEQ ID NOs:1-3 and 52 represent genes upregulated in adipocytes obtained from normal and obese subjects when exposed to PPARγ agonist. Expression of these genes may be necessary for adipocyte differentiation and increased insulin sensitivity. SEQ ID NOs:4-25 and 53-54 represent genes downregulated in adipocytes obtained from normal and obese subjects when exposed to PPARγ agonist. Expression of these genes may be specific to pre-adipocytes and downregulation may be necessary to generate the differentiated phenotype and increase insulin sensitivity. SEQ ID NO:4 encodes the interleukin-13α2 receptor, a decoy receptor which has high affinity for IL-13 but which is not involved in IL-13 signaling. SEQ ID NOs:5-8 encode members of the pregnancy-specific beta-glycoprotein family.

[0057] SEQ ID NOs:26-51 are differentially regulated in response to PPARγ agonist in adipocytes from normal subjects relative to obese subjects. These genes may be involved in insulin resistance and NIDDM. SEQ ID NOs:26 and 27 are upregulated in adipocytes from normal donors stimulated with PPARγ but remain unchanged in adipocytes from obese donors. SEQ ID NO:26 is a member of the G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) family and SEQ ID NO:27 is a member of the Wnt family of signaling molecules. SEQ ID NOs:28 and 29 are downregulated in adipocytes from obese donors stimulated with PPARγ but unchanged in adipocytes from normal donors. SEQ ID NO:28 is a member of the frizzled family, a group of serpentine receptors involved in Wnt signaling. SEQ ID NOs:30-32 are upregulated in adipocytes from obese donors stimulated with PPARγ but unchanged in adipocytes from normal donors. SEQ ID NOs:31 and 32 are novel transcripts associated with PPARγ signaling in adipocytes from obese donors. SEQ ID NOs:36-51 are downregulated in adipocytes from normal donors stimulated with PPARγ but remain unchanged in adipocytes from obese donors. SEQ ID NOs:39-51 are novel transcripts from this group. SEQ ID NOs:33-35 are downregulated in adipocytes from normal donors stimulated with PPARγ and upregulated in adipocytes from obese donors. SEQ ID NO:33 is insulin-like growth factor binding protein 5, a protein that controls the distribution, function, and activity of insulin-like growth factor I. SEQ ID NO:35 is a novel transcript from this group.

[0058] The cDNAs of the invention define a differential expression pattern against which to compare the expression pattern of biopsied and/or in vitro treated tissue. Experimentally, differential expression of the cDNAs can be evaluated by methods including, but not limited to, differential display by spatial immobilization or by gel electrophoresis, genome mismatch scanning, representational discriminate analysis, clustering, transcript imaging and array technologies. These methods may be used alone or in combination.

[0059] The combination may be arranged on a substrate and hybridized with tissues from subjects with diagnosed metabolic disorders to identify those sequences which are differentially expressed in both diabetes and other related disorders. This allows identification of those sequences of highest diagnostic and potential therapeutic value. In one embodiment, an additional set of cDNAs, such as cDNAs encoding insulin signaling molecules, are arranged on the substrate with the combination. Such combinations may be useful in the elucidation of pathways which are affected in a particular disorder or to identify new, coexpressed, candidate, therapeutic molecules.

[0060] In another embodiment, the combination can be used for large scale genetic or gene expression analysis of a large number of novel nucleic acids. These samples are prepared by methods well known in the art and are from mammalian cells or tissues which are in a certain stage of development; have been treated with a known molecule or compound, such as a cytokine, growth factor, a drug, and the like; or have been extracted or biopsied from a mammal with a known or unknown condition, disorder, or disease before or after treatment. The sample nucleic acids are hybridized to the combination for the purpose of defining a novel gene profile associated with that developmental stage, treatment, or disorder.

[0061] cDNAs and Their Uses

[0062] cDNAs can be prepared by a variety of synthetic or enzymatic methods well known in the art. cDNAs can be synthesized, in whole or in part, using chemical methods well known in the art (Caruthers et al. (1980) Nucleic Acids Symp Ser (7):215-233). Alternatively, cDNAs can be produced enzymatically or recombinantly, by in vitro or in vivo transcription.

[0063] Nucleotide analogs can be incorporated into cDNAs by methods well known in the art. The only requirement is that the incorporated analog must base pair with native purines or pyrimidines. For example, 2,6-diaminopurine can substitute for adenine and form stronger bonds with thymidine than those between adenine and thymidine. A weaker pair is formed when hypoxanthine is substituted for guanine and base pairs with cytosine. Additionally, cDNAs can include nucleotides that have been derivatized chemically or enzymatically.

[0064] cDNAs can be synthesized on a substrate. Synthesis on the surface of a substrate may be accomplished using a chemical coupling procedure and a piezoelectric printing apparatus as described by Baldeschweiler et al. (PCT publication WO95/251116). Alternatively, the cDNAs can be synthesized on a substrate surface using a self-addressable electronic device that controls when reagents are added as described by Heller et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 5,605,662). cDNAs can be synthesized directly on a substrate by sequentially dispensing reagents for their synthesis on the substrate surface or by dispensing preformed DNA fragments to the substrate surface. Typical dispensers include a micropipette delivering solution to the substrate with a robotic system to control the position of the micropipette with respect to the substrate. There can be a multiplicity of dispensers so that reagents can be delivered to the reaction regions efficiently.

[0065] cDNAs can be immobilized on a substrate by covalent means such as by chemical bonding procedures or UV irradiation. In one method, a cDNA is bound to a glass surface which has been modified to contain epoxide or aldehyde groups. In another method, a cDNA is placed on a polylysine coated surface and UV cross-linked to it as described by Shalon et al. (WO95/35505). In yet another method, a cDNA is actively transported from a solution to a given position on a substrate by electrical means (Heller, supra). cDNAs do not have to be directly bound to the substrate, but rather can be bound to the substrate through a linker group. The linker groups are typically about 6 to 50 atoms long to provide exposure of the attached cDNA. Preferred linker groups include ethylene glycol oligomers, diamines, diacids and the like. Reactive groups on the substrate surface react with a terminal group of the linker to bind the linker to the substrate. The other terminus of the linker is then bound to the cDNA. Alternatively, polynucleotides, plasmids or cells can be arranged on a filter. In the latter case, cells are lysed, proteins and cellular components degraded, and the DNA is coupled to the filter by UV cross-linking.

[0066] The cDNAs may be used for a variety of purposes. For example, the combination of the invention may be used on an array. The array, in turn, can be used in high-throughput methods for detecting a related polynucleotide in a sample, screening a plurality of molecules or compounds to identify a ligand, diagnosing a disorder such as diabetes, or inhibiting or inactivating a therapeutically relevant gene related to the cDNA.

[0067] When the cDNAs of the invention are employed on an array, the cDNAs are arranged in an ordered fashion so that each cDNA is present at a specified location. Because the cDNAs are at specified locations on the substrate, the hybridization patterns and intensities, which together create a unique, can be interpreted in terms of expression levels of particular genes and can be correlated with a particular metabolic process, condition, disorder, disease, stage of disease, or treatment.

[0068] Hybridization

[0069] The cDNAs or fragments or complements thereof may be used in various hybridization technologies. The cDNAs may be labeled using a variety of reporter molecules by either PCR, recombinant, or enzymatic techniques. For example, a commercially available vector containing the cDNA is transcribed in the presence of an appropriate polymerase, such as T7 or SP6 polymerase, and at least one labeled nucleotide. Commercial kits are available for labeling and cleanup of such cDNAs. Radioactive (Amersham Biosciences (APB), Piscataway N.J.), fluorescent (Qiagen-Operon, Alameda Calif.), and chemiluminescent labeling (Promega, Madison Wis.) are well known in the art.

[0070] A cDNA may represent the complete coding region of an mRNA or be designed or derived from unique regions of the mRNA or genomic molecule, an intron, a 3′ untranslated region, or from a conserved motif. The cDNA is at least 18 contiguous nucleotides in length and is usually single stranded. Such a cDNA may be used under hybridization conditions that allow binding only to an identical sequence, a naturally occurring molecule encoding the same protein, or an allelic variant. Discovery of related human and mammalian sequences may also be accomplished using a pool of degenerate cDNAs and appropriate hybridization conditions. Generally, a cDNA for use in Southern or northern hybridizations may be from about 400 to about 6000 nucleotides long. Such cDNAs have high binding specificity in solution-based or substrate-based hybridizations. An oligonucleotide, a fragment of the cDNA, may be used to detect a polynucleotide in a sample using PCR.

[0071] The stringency of hybridization is determined by G+C content of the cDNA, salt concentration, and temperature. In particular, stringency is increased by reducing the concentration of salt or raising the hybridization temperature. In solutions used for some membrane based hybridizations, addition of an organic solvent such as formamide allows the reaction to occur at a lower temperature. Hybridization may be performed with buffers, such as 5× saline sodium citrate (SSC) with 1% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) at 60° C., that permit the formation of a hybridization complex between nucleic acid sequences that contain some mismatches. Subsequent washes are performed with buffers such as 0.2×SSC with 0.1% SDS at either 45° C. (medium stringency) or 65°-68° C. (high stringency). At high stringency, hybridization complexes will remain stable only where the nucleic acids are completely complementary. In some membrane-based hybridizations, preferably 35% or most preferably 50%, formamide may be added to the hybridization solution to reduce the temperature at which hybridization is performed. Background signals may be reduced by the use of detergents such as Sarkosyl or TRITON X-100 (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis Mo.) and a blocking agent such as denatured salmon sperm DNA. Selection of components and conditions for hybridization are well known to those skilled in the art and are reviewed in Ausubel et al. (1997, Short Protocols in Molecular Biology, John Wiley & Sons, New York N.Y., Units 2.8-2.11, 3.18-3.19 and 4.6-4.9).

[0072] Dot-blot, slot-blot, low density and high density arrays are prepared and analyzed using methods known in the art. cDNAs from about 18 consecutive nucleotides to about 5000 consecutive nucleotides in length are contemplated by the invention and used in array technologies. The preferred number of cDNAs on an array is at least about 100,000, a more preferred number is at least about 40,000, an even more preferred number is at least about 10,000, and a most preferred number is at least about 600 to about 800. The array may be used to monitor the expression level of large numbers of genes simultaneously and to identify genetic variants, mutations, and SNPs. Such information may be used to determine gene function; to understand the genetic basis of a disorder; to diagnose a disorder; and to develop and monitor the activities of therapeutic agents being used to control or cure a disorder. (See, e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 5,474,796; WO95/11995; WO95/35505; U.S. Pat. No. 5,605,662; and U.S. Pat. No. 5,958,342.)

[0073] Screening and Purification Assays Using cDNAs

[0074] A cDNA may be used to screen a library or a plurality of molecules or compounds for a ligand which specifically binds the cDNA. Ligands may be DNA molecules, RNA molecules, peptide nucleic acid molecules, peptides, proteins such as transcription factors, promoters, enhancers, repressors, and other proteins that regulate replication, transcription, or translation of the polynucleotide in the biological system. The assay involves combining the cDNA or a fragment thereof with the molecules or compounds under conditions that allow specific binding and detecting the bound cDNA to identify at least one ligand that specifically binds the cDNA.

[0075] In one embodiment, the cDNA may be incubated with a library of isolated and purified molecules or compounds and binding activity determined by methods such as a gel-retardation assay (U.S. Pat. No. 6,010,849) or a reticulocyte lysate transcriptional assay. In another embodiment, the cDNA may be incubated with nuclear extracts from biopsied and/or cultured cells and tissues. Specific binding between the cDNA and a molecule or compound in the nuclear extract is initially determined by gel shift assay. Protein binding may be confirmed by raising antibodies against the protein and adding the antibodies to the gel-retardation assay where specific binding will cause a supershift in the assay.

[0076] In another embodiment, the cDNA may be used to purify a molecule or compound using affinity chromatography methods well known in the art. In one embodiment, the cDNA is chemically reacted with cyanogen bromide groups on a polymeric resin or gel. Then a sample is passed over and reacts with or binds to the cDNA. The molecule or compound which is bound to the cDNA may be released from the cDNA by increasing the salt concentration of the flow-through medium and collected.

[0077] The cDNA may be used to purify a ligand from a sample. A method for using a cDNA to purify a ligand would involve combining the cDNA or a fragment thereof with a sample under conditions to allow specific binding, recovering the bound cDNA, and using an appropriate agent to separate the cDNA from the purified ligand.

[0078] Protein Production and Uses

[0079] The full length cDNAs or fragments thereof may be used to produce purified proteins using recombinant DNA technologies described herein and taught in Ausubel (supra; Units 16.1-16.62). One of the advantages of producing proteins by these procedures is the ability to obtain highly-enriched sources of the proteins thereby simplifying purification procedures.

[0080] The proteins may contain amino acid substitutions, deletions or insertions made on the basis of similarity in polarity, charge, solubility, hydrophobicity, hydrophilicity, and/or the amphipathic nature of the residues involved. Such substitutions may be conservative in nature when the substituted residue has structural or chemical properties similar to the original residue (e.g., replacement of leucine with isoleucine or valine) or they may be nonconservative when the replacement residue is radically different (e.g., a glycine replaced by a tryptophan). Computer programs included in LASERGENE software (DNASTAR, Madison Wis.) and algorithms included in RasMol software (University of Massachusetts, Amherst Mass.) may be used to help determine which and how many amino acid residues in a particular portion of the protein may be substituted, inserted, or deleted without abolishing biological or immunological activity.

[0081] Expression of Encoded Proteins

[0082] Expression of a particular cDNA may be accomplished by cloning the cDNA into a vector and transforming this vector into a host cell. The cloning vector used for the construction of cDNA libraries in the LIFESEQ databases (Incyte Genomics, Palo Alto Calif.) may also be used for expression. Such vectors usually contain a promoter and a polylinker useful for cloning, priming, and transcription. An exemplary vector may also contain the promoter for β-galactosidase, an amino-terminal methionine and the subsequent seven amino acid residues of β-galactosidase. The vector may be transformed into competent E. coli cells. Induction of the isolated bacterial strain with isopropylthiogalactoside (IPTG) using standard methods will produce a fusion protein that contains an N terminal methionine, the first seven residues of β-galactosidase, about 15 residues of linker, and the protein encoded by the cDNA.

[0083] The cDNA may be shuttled into other vectors known to be useful for expression of protein in specific hosts. Oligonucleotides containing cloning sites and fragments of DNA sufficient to hybridize to stretches at both ends of the cDNA may be chemically synthesized by standard methods. These primers may then be used to amplify the desired fragments by PCR. The fragments may be digested with appropriate restriction enzymes under standard conditions and isolated using gel electrophoresis. Alternatively, similar fragments are produced by digestion of the cDNA with appropriate restriction enzymes and filled in with chemically synthesized oligonucleotides. Fragments of the coding sequence from more than one gene may be ligated together and expressed.

[0084] Signal sequences that dictate secretion of soluble proteins are particularly desirable as component parts of a recombinant sequence. For example, a chimeric protein may be expressed that includes one or more additional purification-facilitating domains. Such domains include, but are not limited to, metal-chelating domains that allow purification on immobilized metals, protein A domains that allow purification on immobilized immunoglobulin, and the domain utilized in the FLAGS extension/affinity purification system (Immunex, Seattle Wash.). The inclusion of a cleavable-linker sequence such as ENTEROKINASEMAX (Invitrogen, San Diego Calif.) between the protein and the purification domain may also be used to recover the protein.

[0085] Suitable host cells may include, but are not limited to, mammalian cells such as Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO) and human 293 cells, insect cells such as Sf9 cells, plant cells such as Nicotiana tabacum, yeast cells such as Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and bacteria such as E. coli. For each of these cell systems, a useful vector may also include an origin of replication and one or two selectable markers to allow selection in bacteria as well as in a transformed eukaryotic host. Vectors for use in eukaryotic host cells may require the addition of 3′ poly(A) tail if the cDNA lacks poly(A).

[0086] Additionally, the vector may contain promoters or enhancers that increase gene expression. Many promoters are known and used in the art. Most promoters are host specific and exemplary promoters includes SV40 promoters for CHO cells; T7 promoters for bacterial hosts; viral promoters and enhancers for plant cells; and PGH promoters for yeast. Adenoviral vectors with the rous sarcoma virus enhancer or retroviral vectors with long terminal repeat promoters may be used to drive protein expression in mammalian cell lines. Once homogeneous cultures of recombinant cells are obtained, large quantities of secreted soluble protein may be recovered from the conditioned medium and analyzed using chromatographic methods well known in the art. An alternative method for the production of large amounts of secreted protein involves the transformation of mammalian embryos and the recovery of the recombinant protein from milk produced by transgenic cows, goats, sheep, and the like.

[0087] In addition to recombinant production, proteins or portions thereof may be produced manually, using solid-phase techniques (Stewart et al. (1969) Solid-Phase Peptide Synthesis, W H Freeman, San Francisco Calif.; Merrifield (1963) J Am Chem Soc 5:2149-2154), or using machines such as the 431A peptide synthesizer (Applied Biosystems (ABI), Foster City Calif.). Proteins produced by any of the above methods may be used as pharmaceutical compositions to treat disorders associated with null or inadequate expression of the genomic sequence.

[0088] Screening and Purification Assays Using Proteins

[0089] A protein or a portion thereof encoded by the cDNA may be used to screen a library or a plurality of molecules or compounds for a ligand with specific binding affinity or to purify a molecule or compound from a sample. The protein or portion thereof employed in such screening may be free in solution, affixed to an abiotic or biotic substrate, or located intracellularly. For example, viable or fixed prokaryotic host cells that are stably transformed with recombinant nucleic acids that have expressed and positioned a protein on their cell surface can be used in screening assays. The cells are screened against a library or a plurality of ligands and the specificity of binding or formation of complexes between the expressed protein and the ligand may be measured. The ligands may be agonists, antagonists, antibodies, DNA molecules, enhancers, small drug molecules, immunoglobulins, inhibitors, mimetics, peptide nucleic acid molecules, peptides, pharmaceutical agents, proteins, and regulatory proteins, repressors, RNA molecules, ribozymes, transcription factors, or any other test molecule or compound that specifically binds the protein. An exemplary assay involves combining the mammalian protein or a portion thereof with the molecules or compounds under conditions that allow specific binding and detecting the bound protein to identify at least one ligand that specifically binds the protein.

[0090] This invention also contemplates the use of competitive drug screening assays in which neutralizing antibodies capable of binding the protein specifically compete with a test compound capable of binding to the protein or oligopeptide or fragment thereof. One method for high throughput screening using very small assay volumes and very small amounts of test compound is described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,876,946. Molecules or compounds identified by screening may be used in a model system to evaluate their toxicity, diagnostic, or therapeutic potential.

[0091] The protein may be used to purify a ligand from a sample. A method for using a protein to purify a ligand would involve combining the protein or a portion thereof with a sample under conditions to allow specific binding, recovering the bound protein, and using an appropriate chaotropic agent to separate the protein from the purified ligand.

[0092] Production of Antibodies

[0093] A protein encoded by a cDNA of the invention may be used to produce specific antibodies. Antibodies may be produced using an oligopeptide or a portion of the protein with inherent immunological activity. Methods for producing antibodies include: 1) injecting an animal, usually goats, rabbits, or mice, with the protein, or an antigenically-effective portion or an oligopeptide thereof, to induce an immune response; 2) engineering hybridomas to produce monoclonal antibodies; 3) inducing in vivo production in the lymphocyte population; or 4) screening libraries of recombinant immunoglobulins. Recombinant immunoglobulins may be produced as taught in U.S. Pat. No. 4,816,567.

[0094] Antibodies produced using the proteins of the invention are useful for the diagnosis of prepathologic disorders as well as the diagnosis of chronic or acute diseases characterized by abnormalities in the expression, amount, or distribution of the protein. A variety of protocols for competitive binding or immunoradiometric assays using either polyclonal or monoclonal antibodies specific for proteins are well known in the art. Immunoassays typically involve the formation of complexes between a protein and its specific binding molecule or compound and the measurement of complex formation. Immunoassays may employ a two-site, monoclonal-based assay that utilizes monoclonal antibodies reactive to two noninterfering epitopes on a specific protein or a competitive binding assay (Pound (1998) Immunochemical Protocols, Humana Press, Totowa N.J.).

[0095] Immunoassay procedures may be used to quantify expression of the protein in cell cultures, in subjects with a particular disorder or in model animal systems under various conditions. Increased or decreased production of proteins as monitored by immunoassay may contribute to knowledge of the cellular activities associated with developmental pathways, engineered conditions or diseases, or treatment efficacy. The quantity of a given protein in a given tissue may be determined by performing immunoassays on freeze-thawed detergent extracts of biological samples and comparing the slope of the binding curves to binding curves generated by purified protein.

[0096] Antibody Arrays

[0097] In an alternative to yeast two hybrid system analysis of proteins, an antibody array can be used to study protein-protein interactions and phosphorylation. A variety of protein ligands are immobilized on a membrane using methods well known in the art. The array is incubated in the presence of cell lysate until protein:antibody complexes are formed. Proteins of interest are identified by exposing the membrane to an antibody specific to the protein of interest. In the alternative, a protein of interest is labeled with digoxigenin (DIG) and exposed to the membrane; then the membrane is exposed to anti-DIG antibody which reveals where the protein of interest forms a complex. The identity of the proteins with which the protein of interest interacts is determined by the position of the protein of interest on the membrane.

[0098] Antibody arrays can also be used for high-throughput screening of recombinant antibodies. Bacteria containing antibody genes are robotically-picked and gridded at high density (up to 18,342 different double-spotted clones) on a filter. Up to 15 antigens at a time are used to screen for clones to identify those that express binding antibody fragments. These antibody arrays can also be used to identify proteins which are differentially expressed in samples (de Wildt et al. (2000) Nat Biotechnol 18:989-94).

[0099] Labeling of Molecules for Assay

[0100] A wide variety of reporter molecules and conjugation techniques are known by those skilled in the art and may be used in various cDNA, polynucleotide, protein, peptide or antibody assays. Synthesis of labeled molecules may be achieved using commercial kits for incorporation of a labeled nucleotide such as ³²P-dCTP, Cy3-dCTP or Cy5-dCTP or amino acid such as ³⁵S-methionine. Polynucleotides, cDNAs, proteins, or antibodies may be directly labeled with a reporter molecule by chemical conjugation to amines, thiols and other groups present in the molecules using reagents such as BIODIPY or FITC (Molecular Probes, Eugene Oreg.).

[0101] The proteins and antibodies may be labeled for purposes of assay by joining them, either covalently or noncovalently, with a reporter molecule that provides for a detectable signal. A wide variety of labels and conjugation techniques are known and have been reported in the scientific and patent literature including, but not limited to U.S. Pat. No. 3,817,837; U.S. Pat. No. 3,850,752; U.S. Pat. No. 3,939,350; U.S. Pat. No. 3,996,345; U.S. Pat. No. 4,277,437; U.S. Pat. No. 4,275,149; and U.S. Pat. No. 4,366,241.

[0102] Diagnostics

[0103] The cDNAs, or fragments thereof, may be used to detect and quantify differential gene expression; absence, presence, or excess expression of mRNAs; or to monitor mRNA levels during therapeutic intervention. Disorders associated with altered expression include diabetes mellitus, obesity, hypertension, atherosclerosis, polycystic ovarian syndrome, and cancers including breast, prostate, and colon. These cDNAs can also be utilized as markers of treatment efficacy against the disorders noted above and other disorders, conditions, and diseases over a period ranging from several days to months. The diagnostic assay may use hybridization or amplification technology to compare gene expression in a biological sample from a patient to standard samples in order to detect altered gene expression. Qualitative or quantitative methods for this comparison are well known in the art.

[0104] For example, the cDNA may be labeled by standard methods and added to a biological sample from a patient under conditions for hybridization complex formation. After an incubation period, the sample is washed and the amount of label (or signal) associated with hybridization complexes is quantified and compared with a standard value. If the amount of label in the patient sample is significantly altered in comparison to the standard value, then the presence of the associated condition, disease or disorder is indicated.

[0105] In order to provide a basis for the diagnosis of a condition, disease or disorder associated with gene expression, a normal or standard expression profile is established. This may be accomplished by combining a biological sample taken from normal subjects, either animal or human, with a probe under conditions for hybridization or amplification. Standard hybridization may be quantified by comparing the values obtained using normal subjects with values from an experiment in which a known amount of a purified target sequence is used. Standard values obtained in this manner may be compared with values obtained from samples from patients who are symptomatic for a particular condition, disease, or disorder. Deviation from standard values toward those associated with a particular condition is used to diagnose that condition.

[0106] Such assays may also be used to evaluate the efficacy of a particular therapeutic treatment regimen in animal studies and in clinical trial or to monitor the treatment of an individual patient. Once the presence of a condition is established and a treatment protocol is initiated, diagnostic assays may be repeated on a regular basis to determine if the level of expression in the patient begins to approximate that which is observed in a normal subject. The results obtained from successive assays may be used to show the efficacy of treatment over a period ranging from several days to months.

[0107] Gene Expression Profiles

[0108] A gene expression profile comprises a plurality of cDNAs and a plurality of detectable hybridization complexes, wherein each complex is formed by hybridization of one or more probes to one or more complementary nucleic acids in a sample. The cDNAs of the invention are used as elements on a array to analyze gene expression profiles. In one embodiment, the array is used to monitor the progression of disease. Researchers or clinicians can catalog the differences in gene expression between healthy and diseased tissues or cells. By analyzing changes in patterns of gene expression, disease can be diagnosed at earlier stages before the patient is symptomatic. The invention can be used to formulate a prognosis and to design a treatment regimen. The invention can also be used to monitor the efficacy of treatment. For treatments with known side effects, the array is employed to improve the treatment regimen. A dosage is established that causes a change in genetic expression patterns indicative of successful treatment. Expression patterns associated with the onset of undesirable side effects are avoided. This approach may be more sensitive and rapid than waiting for the patient to show inadequate improvement, or to manifest side effects, before altering the course of treatment.

[0109] Experimentally, expression profiles can also be evaluated by methods including, but not limited to, differential display by spatial immobilization or by gel electrophoresis, labeling with radionuclide and quantification using a scintillation counter, genome mismatch scanning, representational difference analysis, transcript imaging, quantitative PCR, and by protein or antibody arrays. Expression profiles produced by these methods may be contrasted with expression profiles produced using normal or diseased tissues. Of note is the correspondence between mRNA and protein expression has been discussed by Zweiger (2001, Transducing the Genome. McGraw-Hill, San Francisco, Calif.) and Glavas et al. (2001; T cell activation upregulates cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases 8A1 and 7A3, Proc Natl Acad Sci 98:6319-6342) among others.

[0110] In another embodiment, animal models which mimic a human disease can be used to produce expression profiles associated with a particular condition, disorder or disease; or treatment of the condition, disorder or disease. Novel treatment regimens may be tested in these animal models using arrays to establish and then follow expression profiles over time. In addition, arrays may be used with cell cultures or tissues removed from animal models to rapidly screen large numbers of candidate drug molecules, looking for ones that produce an expression profile similar to those of known therapeutic drugs, with the expectation that molecules with the same expression profile will likely have similar therapeutic effects. Thus, the invention provides the means to rapidly determine the molecular mode of action of a drug.

[0111] Assays Using Antibodies

[0112] Antibodies directed against antigenic determinants of a protein encoded by a cDNA of the invention may be used in assays to quantify the amount of protein found in a particular human cell. Such assays include methods utilizing the antibody and a label to detect expression level under normal or disease conditions. The antibodies may be used with or without modification, and labeled by joining them, either covalently or noncovalently, with a labeling moiety.

[0113] Protocols for detecting and measuring protein expression using either polyclonal or monoclonal antibodies are well known in the art. Examples include, but are not limited to, western analysis, ELISA, RIA, FACS, and arrays. Such immunoassays typically involve the formation of complexes between the protein and its specific antibody and the measurement of such complexes. These assays are specifically described in Pound (supra).

[0114] Therapeutics

[0115] The cDNAs and fragments thereof can be used in gene therapy. cDNAs can be delivered ex vivo to target cells, such as cells of bone marrow. Once stable integration and transcription and or translation are confirmed, the bone marrow may be reintroduced into the subject. Expression of the protein encoded by the cDNA may correct a disorder associated with mutation of a normal sequence, reduction or loss of an endogenous target protein, or overepression of an endogenous or mutant protein. Alternatively, cDNAs may be delivered in vivo using vectors such as retrovirus, adenovirus, adeno-associated virus, herpes simplex virus, and bacterial plasmids. Non-viral methods of gene delivery include cationic liposomes, polylysine conjugates, artificial viral envelopes, and direct injection of DNA (Anderson (1998) Nature 392:25-30; Dachs et al. (1997) Oncol Res 9:313-325; Chu et al. (1998) J Mol Med 76(3-4):184-192; Weiss et al. (1999) Cell Mol Life Sci 55(3):334-358; Agrawal (1996) Antisense Therapeutics, Humana Press, Totowa N.J.; and August et al. (1997) Gene Therapy (Advances in Pharmacology, Vol. 40), Academic Press, San Diego Calif.).

[0116] In addition, expression of a particular protein can be regulated through the specific binding of a fragment of a cDNA to a genomic sequence or an mRNA which encodes the protein or directs its transcription or translation. The cDNA can be modified or derivatized to any RNA-like or DNA-like material including peptide nucleic acids, branched nucleic acids, and the like. These sequences can be produced biologically by transforming an appropriate host cell with a vector containing the sequence of interest.

[0117] Molecules which regulate the activity of the cDNA or encoded protein are useful as therapeutics for diabetes mellitus, obesity, hypertension, atherosclerosis, polycystic ovarian syndrome, and cancers including breast, prostate, and colon. Such molecules include agonists which increase the expression or activity of the polynucleotide or encoded protein, respectively; or antagonists which decrease expression or activity of the polynucleotide or encoded protein, respectively. In one aspect, an antibody which specifically binds the protein may be used directly as an antagonist or indirectly as a delivery mechanism for bringing a pharmaceutical agent to cells or tissues which express the protein.

[0118] Additionally, any of the proteins, or their ligands, or complementary nucleic acid sequences may be administered as pharmaceutical compositions or in combination with other appropriate therapeutic agents. Selection of the appropriate agents for use in combination therapy may be made by one of ordinary skill in the art, according to conventional pharmaceutical principles. The combination of therapeutic agents may act synergistically to affect the treatment or prevention of the conditions and disorders associated with an immune response. Using this approach, one may be able to achieve therapeutic efficacy with lower dosages of each agent, thus reducing the potential for adverse side effects. Further, the therapeutic agents may be combined with pharmaceutically-acceptable carriers including excipients and auxiliaries which facilitate processing of the active compounds into preparations which can be used pharmaceutically. Further details on techniques for formulation and administration used by doctors and pharmacists may be found in the latest edition of Remington's Pharmaceutical Sciences (Mack Publishing, Easton Pa.).

[0119] Model Systems

[0120] Animal models may be used as bioassays where they exhibit a phenotypic response similar to that of humans and where exposure conditions are relevant to human exposures. Mammals are the most common models, and most infectious agent, cancer, drug, and toxicity studies are performed on rodents such as rats or mice because of low cost, availability, lifespan, reproductive potential, and abundant reference literature. Inbred and outbred rodent strains provide a convenient model for investigation of the physiological consequences of underexpression or overexpression of genes of interest and for the development of methods for diagnosis and treatment of diseases. A mammal inbred to overexpress a particular gene (for example, secreted in milk) may also serve as a convenient source of the protein expressed by that gene.

[0121] Transgenic Animal Models

[0122] Transgenic rodents that overexpress or underexpress a gene of interest may be inbred and used to model human diseases or to test therapeutic or toxic agents. (See, e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 5,175,383 and U.S. Pat. No. 5,767,337.) In some cases, the introduced gene may be activated at a specific time in a specific tissue type during fetal or postnatal development. Expression of the transgene is monitored by analysis of phenotype, of tissue-specific mRNA expression, or of serum and tissue protein levels in transgenic animals before, during, and after challenge with experimental drug therapies.

[0123] Embryonic Stem Cells

[0124] Embryonic (ES) stem cells isolated from rodent embryos retain the potential to form embryonic tissues. When ES cells such as the mouse 129/SvJ cell line are placed in a blastocyst from the C57BL/6 mouse strain, they resume normal development and contribute to tissues of the live-born animal. ES cells are preferred for use in the creation of experimental knockout and knockin animals. The method for this process is well known in the art and the steps are: the cDNA is introduced into a vector, the vector is transformed into ES cells, transformed cells are identified and microinjected into mouse cell blastocysts, blastocysts are surgically transferred to pseudopregnant dams. The resulting chimeric progeny are genotyped and bred to produce heterozygous or homozygous strains.

[0125] Knockout Analysis

[0126] In gene knockout analysis, a region of a gene is enzymatically modified to include a non-natural intervening sequence such as the neomycin phosphotransferase gene (neo; Capecchi (1989) Science 244:1288-1292). The modified gene is transformed into cultured ES cells and integrates into the endogenous genome by homologous recombination. The inserted sequence disrupts transcription and translation of the endogenous gene.

[0127] Knockin Analysis

[0128] ES cells can be used to create knockin humanized animals or transgenic animal models of human diseases. With knockin technology, a region of a human gene is injected into animal ES cells, and the human sequence integrates into the animal cell genome. Transgenic progeny or inbred lines are studied and treated with potential pharmaceutical agents to obtain information on the progression and treatment of the analogous human condition.

[0129] As described herein, the uses of the cDNAs, provided in the Sequence Listing of this application, and their encoded proteins are exemplary of known techniques and are not intended to reflect any limitation on their use in any technique that would be known to the person of average skill in the art. Furthermore, the cDNAs provided in this application may be used in molecular biology techniques that have not yet been developed, provided the new techniques rely on properties of nucleotide sequences that are currently known to the person of ordinary skill in the art, e.g., the triplet genetic code, specific base pair interactions, and the like. Likewise, reference to a method may include combining more than one method for obtaining or assembling full length cDNA sequences that will be known to those skilled in the art. It is also to be understood that this invention is not limited to the particular methodology, protocols, and reagents described, as these may vary. It is also understood that the terminology used herein is for the purpose of describing particular embodiments only, and is not intended to limit the scope of the present invention which will be limited only by the appended claims. The examples below are provided to illustrate the subject invention and are not included for the purpose of limiting the invention.

EXAMPLES

[0130] I Construction of cDNA Libraries

[0131] RNA was purchased from Clontech Laboratories (Palo Alto Calif.) or isolated from various tissues. Some tissues were homogenized and lysed in guanidinium isothiocyanate, and others were homogenized and lysed in phenol or suitable mixtures of denaturants such as TRIZOL reagent (Invitrogen). The resulting lysates were centrifuged over CsCl cushions or extracted with chloroform. RNA was precipitated with either isopropanol or ethanol and sodium acetate, or by other routine methods.

[0132] Phenol extraction and precipitation of RNA were repeated as necessary to increase RNA purity. In most cases, RNA was treated with DNAse. For most libraries, poly(A) RNA was isolated using oligo d(T)-coupled paramagnetic particles (Promega), OLIGOTEX latex particles (Qiagen, Valencia Calif.), or an OLIGOTEX mRNA purification kit (Qiagen). Alternatively, poly(A) RNA was isolated directly from tissue lysates using other kits, including the POLY(A)PURE mRNA purification kit (Ambion, Austin Tex.).

[0133] In some cases, Stratagene (La Jolla Calif.) was provided with RNA and constructed the corresponding cDNA libraries. Otherwise, cDNA was synthesized and cDNA libraries were constructed with the UNIZAP vector system (Stratagene) or SUPERSCRIPT plasmid system (Invitrogen) using the recommended procedures or similar methods known in the art. (See Ausubel, supra, Units 5.1 through 6.6.) Reverse transcription was initiated using oligo d(T) or random primers. Synthetic oligonucleotide adapters were ligated to double stranded cDNA, and the cDNA was digested with the appropriate restriction enzyme or enzymes. For most libraries, the cDNA was size-selected (300-1000 bp) using SEPHACRYL S1000, SEPHAROSE CL2B, or SEPHAROSE CL4B column chromatography (APB) or preparative agarose gel electrophoresis. cDNAs were ligated into compatible restriction enzyme sites of the polylinker of the pBLUESCRIPT phagemid (Stratagene), pSPORT1 plasmid (Invitrogen), or pINCY plasmid (Incyte Genomics). Recombinant plasmids were transformed into XL1-BLUE, XL1-BLUEMRF, or SOLR competent E. coli cells (Stratagene) or DHSa, DHIOB, or ELECTROMAX DH10B competent E. coli cells (Invitrogen).

[0134] In some cases, libraries were superinfected with a 5× excess of the helper phage, M13K07, according to the method of Vieira et al. (1987, Methods Enzymol 153:3-11) and normalized or subtracted using a methodology adapted from Soares (1994, Proc Natl Acad Sci 91:9228-9232), Swaroop et al. (1991, Nucleic Acids Res 19:1954), and Bonaldo et al. (1996, Genome Res 6:791-806). The modified Soares normalization procedure was utilized to reduce the repetitive cloning of highly expressed high abundance cDNAs while maintaining the overall sequence complexity of the library. Modification included significantly longer hybridization times which allowed for increased gene discovery rates by biasing the normalized libraries toward those infrequently expressed low-abundance cDNAs which are poorly represented in a standard transcript image (Soares, supra).

[0135] II Isolation and Sequencing of cDNA Clones

[0136] Plasmids were recovered from host cells by in vivo excision using the UNIZAP vector system (Stratagene) or by cell lysis. Plasmids were purified using one of the following: the Magic or WIZARD MINIPREPS DNA purification system (Promega); the AGTC MINIPREP purification kit (Edge BioSystems, Gaithersburg Md.); the QIAWELL 8, QIAWELL 8 Plus, or QIAWELL 8 Ultra plasmid purification systems, or the REAL PREP 96 plasmid purification kit (Qiagen). Following precipitation, plasmids were resuspended in 0.1 ml of distilled water and stored, with or without lyophilization, at 4° C.

[0137] Alternatively, plasmid DNA was amplified from host cell lysates using direct link PCR in a high-throughput format (Rao (1994) Anal Biochem 216:1-14). Host cell lysis and thermal cycling steps were carried out in a single reaction mixture. Samples were processed and stored in 384-well plates, and the concentration of amplified plasmid DNA was quantified fluorometrically using PICOGREEN dye (Molecular Probes) and a FLUOROSKAN II fluorescence scanner (Labsystems Oy, Helsinki, Finland).

[0138] cDNA sequencing reactions were processed using standard methods or high-throughput instrumentation such as the CATALYST 800 thermal cycler (ABI) or the DNA ENGINE thermal cycler (MJ Research, Watertown Mass.) in conjunction with the HYDRA microdispenser (Robbins Scientific, Sunnyvale Calif.) or the MICROLAB 2200 system (Hamilton, Reno Nev.). cDNA sequencing reactions were prepared using reagents provided by APB or supplied in sequencing kits such as the PRISM BIGDYE cycle sequencing kit (ABI). Electrophoretic separation of cDNA sequencing reactions and detection of labeled cDNAs were carried out using the MEGABACE 1000 DNA sequencing system (APB); the PRISM 373 or 377 sequencing systems (ABI) in conjunction with standard protocols and base calling software; or other sequence analysis systems known in the art. Reading frames within the cDNA sequences were identified using standard methods (reviewed in Ausubel, supra, Unit 7.7).

[0139] III Extension of cDNA Sequences

[0140] Nucleic acid sequences were extended using the cDNA clones and oligonucleotide primers. One primer was synthesized to initiate 5′ extension of the known fragment, and the other, to initiate 3′ extension of the known fragment. The initial primers were designed using OLIGO primer analysis software (Molecular Biology Insights, Cascade Colo.), or another appropriate program, to be about 22 to 30 nucleotides in length, to have a GC content of about 50% or more, and to anneal to the target sequence at temperatures of about 68° C. to about 72° C. Any stretch of nucleotides which would result in hairpin structures and primer-primer dimerizations was avoided.

[0141] Selected human cDNA libraries were used to extend the sequence. If more than one extension was necessary or desired, additional or nested sets of primers were designed. Preferred libraries are ones that have been size-selected to include larger cDNAs. Also, random primed libraries are preferred because they will contain more sequences with the 5′ and upstream regions of genes. A randomly primed library is particularly useful if an oligo d(T) library does not yield a full-length cDNA.

[0142] High fidelity amplification was obtained by PCR using methods well known in the art. PCR was performed in 96-well plates using the DNA ENGINE thermal cycler (MJ Research). The reaction mix contained DNA template, 200 nmol of each primer, reaction buffer containing Mg²+, (NH₄)₂SO₄, and 1-mercaptoethanol, Taq DNA polymerase (APB), ELONGASE enzyme (Invitrogen), and Pfu DNA polymerase (Stratagene), with the following parameters for primer pair PCI A and PCI B (Incyte Genomics): Step 1: 94° C., 3 min; Step 2: 94° C., 15 sec; Step 3: 60° C., 1 min; Step 4: 68° C., 2 min; Step 5: Steps 2, 3, and 4 repeated 20 times; Step 6: 68° C., 5 min; Step 7: storage at 4° C. In the alternative, the parameters for primer pair T7 and SK+(Stratagene) were as follows: Step 1: 94° C., 3 min; Step 2: 94° C., 15 sec; Step 3: 57° C., 1 min; Step 4: 68° C., 2 min; Step 5: Steps 2, 3, and 4 repeated 20 times; Step 6: 68° C., 5 min; Step 7: storage at 4° C.

[0143] The concentration of DNA in each well was determined by dispensing 100 μl PICOGREEN reagent (0.25% reagent in 1×TE, v/v; Molecular Probes) and 0.5 μl of undiluted PCR product into each well of an opaque fluorimeter plate (Corning Life Sciences, Acton Mass.) and allowing the DNA to bind to the reagent. The plate was scanned in a FLUOROSKAN II (Labsystems Oy) to measure the fluorescence of the sample and to quantify the concentration of DNA. A 5 μl to 10 μl aliquot of the reaction mixture was analyzed by electrophoresis on a 1% agarose mini-gel to determine which reactions were successful in extending the sequence.

[0144] The extended nucleic acids were desalted and concentrated, transferred to 384-well plates, digested with CviJI cholera virus endonuclease (Molecular Biology Research, Madison Wis.), and sonicated or sheared prior to religation into pUC18 vector (APB). For shotgun sequencing, the digested nucleic acids were separated on low concentration (0.6 to 0.8%) agarose gels, fragments were excised, and agar digested with AGARACE enzyme (Promega). Extended clones were religated using T4 DNA ligase (New England Biolabs, Beverly Mass.) into pUC 18 vector (APB), treated with Pfu DNA polymerase (Stratagene) to fill-in restriction site overhangs, and transformed into competent E. coli cells. Transformed cells were selected on antibiotic-containing media, and individual colonies were picked and cultured overnight at 37° C. in 384-well plates in LB/2× carbenicillin liquid media.

[0145] The cells were lysed, and DNA was amplified by PCR using Taq DNA polymerase (APB) and Pfu DNA polymerase (Stratagene) with the following parameters: Step 1: 94° C., 3 min; Step 2: 94° C., 15 sec; Step 3: 60° C., 1 min; Step 4: 72° C., 2 min; Step 5: steps 2, 3, and 4 repeated 29 times; Step 6: 72° C., 5 min; Step 7: storage at 4° C. DNA was quantified using PICOGREEN reagent (Molecular Probes) as described above. Samples with low DNA recoveries were reamplified using the same conditions described above. Samples were diluted with 20% dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO; 1:2, v/v), and sequenced using DYENAMIC energy transfer sequencing primers and the DYENAMIC DIRECT cycle sequencing kit (APB) or the PRISM BIGDYE terminator cycle sequencing kit (ABI).

[0146] IV Assembly and Analysis of Sequences

[0147] The nucleic acid sequences presented in the Sequence Listing may contain occasional sequencing errors and unidentified nucleotides (N) that reflect state-of-the-art technology at the time the cDNA was first sequenced. Occasional sequencing errors and Ns may be resolved and SNPs verified either by resequencing the cDNA or using algorithms to compare the alignment of multiple sequences covering the region in which the N or potential SNP occurs. The sequences may be analyzed using a variety of algorithms described in Ausubel (supra, unit 7.7) and in Meyers (1995; Molecular Biology and Biotechnology, Wiley VCH, New York N.Y., pp. 856-853).

[0148] Component nucleotide sequences from chromatograms were subjected to PHRED analysis (Phil Green, University of Washington, Seattle Wash.) and assigned a quality score. The sequences having at least a required quality score were subject to various pre-processing algorithms to eliminate low quality 3′ ends, vector and linker sequences, polyA tails, Alu repeats, mitochondrial and ribosomal sequences, bacterial contamination sequences, and sequences smaller than 50 base pairs. Sequences were screened using the BLOCK 2 program (Incyte Genomics), a motif analysis program based on sequence information contained in the SWISS-PROT and PROSITE databases (Bairoch et al. (1997) Nucleic Acids Res 25:217-221; Attwood et al. (1997) J Chem Inf Comput Sci 37:417-424).

[0149] Processed sequences were subjected to assembly procedures in which the sequences were assigned to bins, one sequence per bin. Sequences in each bin were assembled to produce consensus sequences, templates. Subsequent new sequences were added to existing bins using BLAST (Altschul (1993, supra); Altschul (1990, supra); and Karlin et al. (1988) Proc Natl Acad Sci 85:841-845), BLASTn (vers.1.4, Washington University), and CROSSMATCH software (Phil Green, supra). Candidate pairs were identified as all BLAST hits having a quality score greater than or equal to 150. Alignments of at least 82% local identity were accepted into the bin. The component sequences from each bin were assembled using PHRAP (Green, supra). Bins with several overlapping component sequences were assembled using DEEP PHRAP (Green, supra).

[0150] Bins were compared against each other, and those having local similarity of at least 82% were combined and reassembled. Reassembled bins having templates of insufficient overlap (less than 95% local identity) were re-split. Assembled templates were also subjected to analysis by STITCHER/EXON MAPPER algorithms which analyzed the probabilities of the presence of splice variants, alternatively spliced exons, splice junctions, differential expression of alternative spliced genes across tissue types, disease states, and the like. These resulting bins were subjected to several rounds of the above assembly procedures to generate the template sequences found in the LIFESEQ GOLD database (Incyte Genomics).

[0151] In one alternative, partial cDNA sequences were extended with exons identified by running the Genscan gene identification program against public genomic sequence databases (e.g., gbpri and gbhtg). Genscan is a general-purpose gene identification program which analyzes genomic DNA sequences from a variety of organisms (Burge and Karlin (1997) J Mol Biol 268:78-94; Burge and Karlin (1998) Curr Opin Struct Biol 8:346-354). The program concatenates predicted exons to form an assembled cDNA sequence extending from a methionine to a stop codon. The output of Genscan is a FASTA database of polynucleotide and polypeptide sequences. The maximum range of sequence for Genscan to analyze at once was set to 30 kb. Selected Genscan-predicted sequences were compared by BLAST analysis to the genpept and gbpri public databases. Where necessary, the Genscan-predicted sequences were then ediled by comparison to the top BLAST hit from genpept to correct errors in the sequence predicted by Genscan, such as extra or omitted exons.

[0152] In a second alternative, partial cDNAs were extended by mapping to genomic DNA and parsing into clusters containing related cDNAs and Genscan exon predictions from one or more genomic sequences. Each cluster was analyzed using an algorithm based on graph theory and dynamic programming to integrate cDNA and genomic information, generating possible splice variants that were subsequently confirmed, edited, or extended to create a full length sequence. Sequence intervals in which the entire length of the interval was present on more than one sequence in the cluster were identified, and intervals thus identified were considered to be equivalent by transitivity. For example, if an interval was present on a cDNA and two genomic sequences, then all three intervals were considered to be equivalent. This process allows unrelated but consecutive genomic sequences to be brought together, bridged by cDNA sequence. Intervals thus identified were then “stitched” together by the stitching algorithm in the order that they appear along their parent sequences to generate the longest possible sequence, as well as sequence variants. Linkages between intervals which proceed along one type of parent sequence (cDNA to cDNA or genomic sequence to genomic sequence) were given preference over linkages which change parent type (cDNA to genomic sequence). The resultant stitched sequences were translated and compared by BLAST analysis to the genpept and gbpri public databases. Incorrect exons predicted by Genscan were corrected by comparison to the top BLAST hit from genpept. Sequences were further extended with additional cDNA sequences, or by inspection of genomic DNA, when necessary.

[0153] In a third alternative, partial cDNA sequences were extended to full length using an algorithm based on BLAST analysis. First, partial cDNAs were queried against public databases such as the GenBank primate, rodent, mammalian, vertebrate, and eukaryote databases using the BLAST program. The nearest GenBank protein homolog was then compared by BLAST analysis to either Incyte cDNA sequences or GenScan exon predicted sequences described above. A chimeric protein was generated by using the resultant high-scoring segment pairs (HSPs) to map the translated sequences onto the GenBank protein homolog. Insertions or deletions may occur in the chimeric protein with respect to the original GenBank protein homolog. The GenBank protein homolog, the chimeric protein, or both were used as probes to search for homologous genomic sequences from the public human genome databases. Partial DNA sequences were therefore “stretched” or extended by the addition of homologous genomic sequences. The resultant stretched sequences were examined to determine whether it contained a complete gene.

[0154] The assembled templates were annotated using the following procedure. Template sequences were analyzed using BLASTn (vers. 2.0, NCBI) versus GBpri (GenBank vers. 122). “Hits” were defined as an exact match having from 95% local identity over 200 base pairs through 100% local identity over 100 base pairs, or a homolog match having an E-value equal to or greater than 1×10⁻⁸. (The “E-value” quantifies the statistical probability that a match between two sequences occurred by chance). The hits were subjected to frameshift FASTx versus GENPEPT (GenBank version 122). In this analysis, a homolog match was defined as having an E-value of 1×10⁻⁸. The assembly method used above was described in U.S. Ser. No. 09/276,534, filed Mar. 25, 1999, and the LIFESEQ GOLD user manual (Incyte Genomics).

[0155] Following assembly, template sequences were subjected to motif, BLAST, Hidden Markov Model (HMM; Pearson and Lipman (1988) Proc Natl Acad Sci 85:2444-2448; Smith and Waterman, supra), and functional analyses, and categorized in protein hierarchies using methods described in U.S. Ser. No. 08/812,290, filed Mar. 6, 1997; U.S. Ser. No. 08/947,845, filed Oct. 9, 1997; U.S. Pat. No. 5,953,727; and U.S. Ser. No. 09/034,807, filed Mar. 4, 1998. Template sequences may be further queried against public databases such as the GenBank rodent, mammalian, vertebrate, eukaryote, prokaryote, and human EST databases.

[0156] V Selection of Sequences, Microarray Preparation and Use

[0157] Incyte clones represent template sequences derived from the LIFESEQ GOLD assembled human sequence database (Incyte Genomics). In cases where more than one clone was available for a particular template, the 5′-most clone in the template was used on the microarray. The HUMAN GENOME GEM series 1-5 microarrays (Incyte Genomics) contain 45,320 array elements which represent 22,632 annotated clusters and 22,688 unannotated clusters. For the UNIGEM series microarrays (Incyte Genomics), Incyte clones were mapped to non-redundant Unigene clusters (Unigene database (build 46), NCBI; Shuler (1997) J Mol Med 75:694-698), and the 5′ clone with the strongest BLAST alignment (at least 90% identity and 100 bp overlap) was chosen, verified, and used in the construction of the microarray. The UNIGEM V 2.0 microarray (Incyte Genomics) contains 8,502 array elements which represent 8,372 annotated genes and 130 unannotated clusters.

[0158] To construct microarrays, cDNAs were amplified from bacterial cells using primers complementary to vector sequences flanking the cDNA insert. Thirty cycles of PCR increased the initial quantity of cDNAs from 1-2 ng to a final quantity greater than 5 μg. Amplified cDNAs were then purified using SEPHACRYL-400 columns (APB). Purified cDNAs were immobilized on polymer-coated glass slides. Glass microscope slides (Coming, Corning N.Y.) were cleaned by ultrasound in 0.1% SDS and acetone, with extensive distilled water washes between and after treatments. Glass slides were etched in 4% hydrofluoric acid (VWR Scientific Products, West Chester Pa.), washed thoroughly in distilled water, and coated with 0.05% aminopropyl silane (Sigma-Aldrich) in 95% ethanol. Coated slides were cured in a 110° C. oven. cDNAs were applied to the coated glass substrate using a procedure described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,807,522. One microliter of the cDNA at an average concentration of 100 ng/ul was loaded into the open capillary printing element by a high-speed robotic apparatus which then deposited about 5 nl of cDNA per slide.

[0159] Microarrays were UV-crosslinked using a STRATALINKER UV-crosslinker (Stratagene), and then washed at room temperature once in 0.2% SDS and three times in distilled water. Non-specific binding sites were blocked by incubation of microarrays in 0.2% casein in phosphate buffered saline (Tropix, Bedford Mass.) for 30 minutes at 60° C. followed by washes in 0.2% SDS and distilled water as before.

[0160] VI Preparation of Samples

[0161] Isolation and Labeling of Sample cDNAs

[0162] Primary cultures of preadipocytes were obtained from subcutaneous fat obtained from a 28 year-old female with a body mass index (BMI; kg/m²) of 23.59 and from a 40 year old female with a BMI of 32.47. Individuals with a BMI between 18.5 and 24.9 are classified as ‘healthy’ or normal, whereas individuals with a BMI between 30.0 and 39.9 are classified as obese. Preadipocytes were cultured in F-10 medium with 10% fetal bovine serum. Confluent cells were either treated with 1 μM rosiglitazone (BRL49653), 0.2 mM IBMX, and 100 nM human insulin for 3 days; or remained untreated. Thereafter, the cells were cultured in F-10 medium with 3% fetal bovine serum and 100 nM human insulin. Differentiated adipocytes were compared to untreated preadipocytes maintained in culture in the absence of inducing agents. Between 80% and 90% of the preadipocytes observed under a phase contrast microscope had differentiated to adipocytes by day 15. Cells were harvested at 1, 2, 8, and 15 days post treatment.

[0163] Cells were harvested and lysed in 1 ml of TRIZOL reagent (5×10⁶ cells/ml; Invitrogen). The lysates were vortexed thoroughly and incubated at room temperature for 2-3 minutes and extracted with 0.5 ml chloroform. The extract was mixed, incubated at room temperature for 5 minutes, and centrifuged at 16,000×g for 15 minutes at 4° C. The aqueous layer was collected, and an equal volume of isopropanol was added. Samples were mixed, incubated at room temperature for 10 minutes, and centrifuged at 16,000×g for 20 minutes at 4° C. The supernatant was removed, and the RNA pellet was washed with 1 ml of 70% ethanol, centrifuged at 16,000×g at 4° C., and resuspended in RNAse-free water. The concentration of the RNA was determined by measuring the optical density at 260 nm.

[0164] Poly(A) RNA was prepared using an OLIGOTEX mRNA kit (Qiagen) with the following modifications: OLIGOTEX beads were washed in tubes rather than spin columns, resuspended in elution buffer, and then loaded onto spin columns to recover the mRNA. To obtain maximum yield, the mRNA was eluted twice.

[0165] Each poly(A) RNA sample was reverse transcribed using MMLV reverse-transcriptase, 0.05 pg/μl oligo-d(T) primer (21mer), lx first strand buffer, 0.03 units/ul RNAse inhibitor, 500 uM dATP, 500 uM dGTP, 500 uM dTTP, 40 uM dCTP, and 40 uM either dCTP-Cy3 or dCTP-Cy5 (APB). The reverse transcription reaction was performed in a 25 ml volume containing 200 ng poly(A) RNA using the GEMBRIGHT kit (Incyte Genomics). Specific control poly(A) RNAs (YCFRO6, YCFR45, YCFR67, YCFR85, YCFR43, YCFR22, YCFR23, YCFR25, YCFR44, YCFR26) were synthesized by in vitro transcription from non-coding yeast genomic DNA (W. Lei, unpublished). As quantitative controls, control mRNAs (YCFRO6, YCFR45, YCFR67, and YCFR85) at 0.002 ng, 0.02 ng, 0.2 ng, and 2 ng were diluted into reverse transcription reaction at ratios of 1:100,000, 1:10,000, 1:1000, 1:100 (w/w) to sample mRNA, respectively. To sample differential expression patterns, control mRNAs (YCFR43, YCFR22, YCFR23, YCFR25, YCFR44, YCFR26) were diluted into reverse transcription reaction at ratios of 1:3, 3:1, 1:10, 10:1, 1:25, 25:1 (w/w) to sample mRNA. Reactions were incubated at 37° C. for 2 hr, treated with 2.5 ml of 0.5M sodium hydroxide, and incubated for 20 minutes at 85° C. to the stop the reaction and degrade the RNA. cDNAs were purified using two successive CHROMA SPIN 30 gel filtration spin columns (Clontech). Cy3- and Cy5-labeled reaction samples were combined as described below and ethanol precipitated using 1 ml of glycogen (1 mg/ml), 60 ml sodium acetate, and 300 ml of 100% ethanol. The cDNAs were then dried to completion using a SpeedVAC system (Savant Instruments, Holbrook N.Y.) and resuspended in 14 μl 5×SSC, 0.2% SDS.

[0166] VII Hybridization and Detection

[0167] Hybridization reactions contained 9 μl of sample mixture containing 0.2 μg each of Cy3 and Cy5 labeled cDNA synthesis products in 5×SSC, 0.2% SDS hybridization buffer. The mixture was heated to 65° C. for 5 minutes and was aliquoted onto the microarray surface and covered with an 1.8 cm² coverslip. The microarrays were transferred to a waterproof chamber having a cavity just slightly larger than a microscope slide. The chamber was kept at 100% humidity internally by the addition of 140 μl of 5×SSC in a corner of the chamber. The chamber containing the microarrays was incubated for about 6.5 hours at 60° C. The microarrays were washed for 10 min at 45° C. in low stringency wash buffer (1×SSC, 0.1% SDS), three times for 10 minutes each at 45° C. in high stringency wash buffer (0.1×SSC), and dried.

[0168] Reporter-labeled hybridization complexes were detected with a microscope equipped with an Innova 70 mixed gas 10 W laser (Coherent, Santa Clara Calif.) capable of generating spectral lines at 488 nm for excitation of Cy3 and at 632 nm for excitation of Cy5. The excitation laser light was focused on the microarray using a 20× microscope objective (Nikon, Melville N.Y.). The slide containing the microarray was placed on a computer-controlled X-Y stage on the microscope and raster-scanned past the objective. The 1.8 cm×1.8 cm microarray used in the present example was scanned with a resolution of 20 micrometers.

[0169] In two separate scans, the mixed gas multiline laser excited the two fluorophores sequentially. Emitted light was split, based on wavelength, into two photomultiplier tube detectors (PMT R1477; Hamamatsu Photonics Systems, Bridgewater N.J.) corresponding to the two fluorophores. Appropriate filters positioned between the microarray and the photomultiplier tubes were used to filter the signals. The emission maxima of the fluorophores used were 565 nm for Cy3 and 650 nm for Cy5. Each microarray was typically scanned twice, one scan per fluorophore using the appropriate filters at the laser source, although the apparatus was capable of recording the spectra from both fluorophores simultaneously.

[0170] The sensitivity of the scans was calibrated using the signal intensity generated by a cDNA control species. Samples of the calibrating cDNA were separately labeled with the two fluorophores and identical amounts of each were added to the hybridization mixture. A specific location on the microarray contained a complementary DNA sequence, allowing the intensity of the signal at that location to be correlated with a weight ratio of hybridizing species of 1:100,000.

[0171] The output of the photomultiplier tube was digitized using a 12-bit RTI-835H analog-to-digital (A/D) conversion board (Analog Devices, Norwood, Mass.) installed in an IBM-compatible PC computer. The digitized data were displayed as an image where the signal intensity was mapped using a linear 20-color transformation to a pseudocolor scale ranging from blue (low signal) to red (high signal). The data was also analyzed quantitatively. Where two different fluorophores were excited and measured simultaneously, the data were first corrected for optical crosstalk (due to overlapping emission spectra) between the fluorophores using each fluorophore's emission spectrum.

[0172] A grid was superimposed over the fluorescence signal image such that the signal from each spot was centered in each element of the grid. The fluorescence signal within each element was then integrated to obtain a numerical value corresponding to the average intensity of the signal. The software used for signal analysis was the GEMTOOLS gene expression analysis program (Incyte Genomics). Significance was defined as signal to background ratio exceeding 2×and area hybridization exceeding 40%.

[0173] VIII Data Analysis and Results

[0174] Array elements that exhibited at least 2-fold change in expression at one or more time points, a signal intensity over 250 units, a signal-to-background ratio of at least 2.5, and an element spot size of at least 40% were identified as differentially expressed using the GEMTOOLS program (Incyte Genomics). Differential expression values were converted to log base 2 scale. The cDNAs that are differentially expressed are shown in Table 1. Table 1 identifies cDNAs upregulated and downregulated in adipocytes from both normal and obese individuals treated with PPARγ agonist, and cDNAs differentially regulated in normal donors relative to adipocytes obtained from obese donors treated with PPARγ. Adipocytes from obese donors may be resistant to insulin and carry a mutation in PPARγ; therefore, these cells may respond differently to endogenous PPARγ agonist than adipocytes from normal donors. The cDNAs are identified by the Clone ID representing the cDNA on a microarray. Table 2 provides a map between the Clone ID reported in Table 1 and the Template ID reported in Table 3 and the Sequence Listing.

[0175] IX Further Characterization of Differentially Expressed cDNAs and Proteins

[0176] Clones were aligned against the LIFESEQ Gold 5.1 database (Incyte Genomics) and an Incyte template and its sequence variants were chosen for each clone. The template and variant sequences were aligned against the GenBank nucleotide sequence databases using BLASTn (vers. 2.0, NCBI) to acquire annotation. The template and variant sequences were translated into amino acid sequences which were aligned against GenPept and other protein databases using BLASTp (vers. 2.0, NCBI) to acquire annotation and characterization, i.e., structural motifs. Table 3 shows the GenBank annotations (where available) for SEQ ID NOs:1-55 of this invention as produced by BLAST analysis.

[0177] Percent sequence identity can be determined electronically for two or more amino acid or nucleic acid sequences using the MEGALIGN program, a component of LASERGENE software (DNASTAR). The percent identity between two amino acid sequences is calculated by dividing the length of sequence A, minus the number of gap residues in sequence A, minus the number of gap residues in sequence B, into the sum of the residue matches between sequence A and sequence B, times one hundred. Gaps of low or of no homology between the two amino acid sequences are not included in determining percentage identity.

[0178] Sequences with conserved protein motifs may be searched using the BLOCKS search program. This program analyses sequence information contained in the Swiss-Prot and PROSITE databases and is useful for determining the classification of uncharacterized proteins translated from genomic or cDNA sequences (Bairoch, supra; Attwood, supra). PROSITE database is a useful source for identifying functional or structural domains that are not detected using motifs due to extreme sequence divergence. Using weight matrices, these domains are calibrated against the SWISS-PROT database to obtain a measure of the chance distribution of the matches.

[0179] The PRINTS database can be searched using the BLIMPS search program to obtain protein family “fingerprints”. The PRINTS database complements the PROSITE database by exploiting groups of conserved motifs within sequence alignments to build characteristic signatures of different protein families. For both BLOCKS and PRINTS analyses, the cutoff scores for local similarity were: >1300=strong, 1000-1300=suggestive; for global similarity were: p<exp-3; and for strength (degree of correlation) were: >1300=strong, 1000-1300=weak.

[0180] X Other Hybridization Technologies and Analyses

[0181] Other hybridization technologies utilize a variety of substrates such as nylon membranes, capillary tubes, etc. Arranging cDNAs on polymer coated slides is described in Example V; sample cDNA preparation and hybridization and analysis using polymer coated slides is described in examples VI and VII, respectively.

[0182] The cDNAs are applied to a membrane substrate by one of the following methods. A mixture of cDNAs is fractionated by gel electrophoresis and transferred to a nylon membrane by capillary transfer. Alternatively, the cDNAs are individually ligated to a vector and inserted into bacterial host cells to form a library. The cDNAs are then arranged on a substrate by one of the following methods. In the first method, bacterial cells containing individual clones are robotically picked and arranged on a nylon membrane. The membrane is placed on LB agar containing selective agent (carbenicillin, kanamycin, ampicillin, or chloramphenicol depending on the vector used) and incubated at 37° C. for 16 hr. The membrane is removed from the agar and consecutively placed colony side up in 10% SDS, denaturing solution (1.5 M NaCl, 0.5 M NaOH), neutralizing solution (1.5 M NaCl, 1 M Tris, pH 8.0), and twice in 2×SSC for 10 min each. The membrane is then UV irradiated in a STRATALINKER UV-crosslinker (Stratagene).

[0183] In the second method, cDNAs are amplified from bacterial vectors by thirty cycles of PCR using primers complementary to vector sequences flanking the insert. PCR amplification increases a starting concentration of 1-2 ng nucleic acid to a final quantity greater than 5 μg. Amplified nucleic acids from about 400 bp to about 5000 bp in length are purified using SEPHACRYL-400 beads (APB). Purified nucleic acids are arranged on a nylon membrane manually or using a dot/slot blotting manifold and suction device and are immobilized by denaturation, neutralization, and UV irradiation as described above.

[0184] Hybridization probes derived from cDNAs of the Sequence Listing are employed for screening cDNAs, mRNAs, or genomic DNA in membrane-based hybridizations. Probes are prepared by diluting the cDNAs to a concentration of 40-50 ng in 45 μl TE buffer, denaturing by heating to 100° C. for five min and briefly centrifuging. The denatured cDNA is then added to a REDIPRIME tube (APB), gently mixed until blue color is evenly distributed, and briefly centrifuged. Five microliters of [³²P]dCTP is added to the tube, and the contents are incubated at 37° C. for 10 min. The labeling reaction is stopped by adding 5 μl of 0.2M EDTA, and probe is purified from unincorporated nucleotides using a PROBEQUANT G-50 microcolumn (APB). The purified probe is heated to 100° C. for five min and then snap cooled for two min on ice.

[0185] Membranes are pre-hybridized in hybridization solution containing 1% Sarkosyl and 1× high phosphate buffer (0.5 M NaCl, 0.1 M Na₂HPO₄, 5 mM EDTA, pH 7) at 55° C. for two hr. The probe, diluted in 15 ml fresh hybridization solution, is then added to the membrane. The membrane is hybridized with the probe at 55° C. for 16 hr. Following hybridization, the membrane is washed for 15 min at 25° C. in 1 mM Tris (pH 8.0), 1% Sarkosyl, and four times for 15 min each at 25° C. in 1 mM Tris (pH 8.0). To detect hybridization complexes, XOMAT-AR film (Eastman Kodak, Rochester N.Y.) is exposed to the membrane overnight at −70° C., developed, and examined.

[0186] XI Expression of the Encoded Protein

[0187] Expression and purification of a protein encoded by a cDNA of the invention is achieved using bacterial or virus-based expression systems. For expression in bacteria, cDNA is subcloned into a vector containing an antibiotic resistance gene and an inducible promoter that directs high levels of cDNA transcription. Examples of such promoters include, but are not limited to, the trp-lac (tac) hybrid promoter and the T5 or T7 bacteriophage promoter in conjunction with the lac operator regulatory element. Recombinant vectors are transformed into bacterial hosts, such as BL21 (DE3). Antibiotic resistant bacteria express the protein upon induction with IPTG. Expression in eukaryotic cells is achieved by infecting Spodoptera frugiperda (Sf9) insect cells with recombinant baculovirus, Autographica californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus. The polyhedrin gene of baculovirus is replaced with the cDNA by either homologous recombination or bacterial-mediated transposition involving transfer plasmid intermediates. Viral infectivity is maintained and the strong polyhedrin promoter drives high levels of transcription.

[0188] For ease of purification, the protein is synthesized as a fusion protein with glutathione-S-transferase (GST; APB) or a similar alternative such as FLAG. The fusion protein is purified on immobilized glutathione under conditions that maintain protein activity and antigenicity. After purification, the GST moiety is proteolytically cleaved from the protein with thrombin. A fusion protein with FLAG, an 8-amino acid peptide, is purified using commercially available monoclonal and polyclonal anti-FLAG antibodies (Eastman Kodak, Rochester N.Y.).

[0189] XII Production of Antibodies

[0190] A denatured protein from a reverse phase HPLC separation is obtained in quantities up to 75 mg. This denatured protein is used to immunize mice or rabbits following standard protocols. About 100 μg is used to immunize a mouse, while up to 1 mg is used to immunize a rabbit. The denatured protein is radioiodinated and incubated with murine B-cell hybridomas to screen for monoclonal antibodies. About 20 mg of protein is sufficient for labeling and screening several thousand clones.

[0191] In another approach, the amino acid sequence translated from a cDNA of the invention is analyzed using PROTEAN software (DNASTAR) to determine antigenic determinants of the protein. The optimal sequences for immunization are usually at the C-terminus, the N-terminus, and those intervening, hydrophilic regions of the protein that are likely to be exposed to the external environment when the protein is in its natural conformation. Typically, oligopeptides about 15 residues in length are synthesized using an 431 peptide synthesizer (ABI) using Fmoc-chemistry and then coupled to keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH; Sigma-Aldrich) by reaction with M-maleimidobenzoyl-N-hydroxysuccinimide ester. If necessary, a cysteine may be introduced at the N-terminus of the peptide to permit coupling to KLH. Rabbits are immunized with the oligopeptide-KLH complex in complete Freund's adjuvant. The resulting antisera are tested for antipeptide activity by binding the peptide to plastic, blocking with 1% BSA, reacting with rabbit antisera, washing, and reacting with radioiodinated goat anti-rabbit IgG.

[0192] Hybridomas are prepared and screened using standard techniques. Hybridomas of interest are detected by screening with radioiodinated protein to identify those fusions producing a monoclonal antibody specific for the protein. In a typical protocol, wells of 96 well plates (FAST, Becton-Dickinson, Palo Alto Calif.) are coated with affinity-purified, specific rabbit-anti-mouse (or suitable anti-species Ig) antibodies at 10 mg/ml. The coated wells are blocked with 1% BSA and washed and exposed to supernatants from hybridomas. After incubation, the wells are exposed to radiolabeled protein at 1 mg/ml. Clones producing antibodies bind a quantity of labeled protein that is detectable above background.

[0193] Such clones are expanded and subjected to 2 cycles of cloning at 1 cell/3 wells. Cloned hybridomas are injected into pristane-treated mice to produce ascites, and monoclonal antibody is purified from the ascitic fluid by affinity chromatography on protein A (APB). Monoclonal antibodies with affinities of at least 10⁸ M⁻¹, preferably 10⁹ to 10¹⁰ M⁻¹ or stronger, are made by procedures well known in the art.

[0194] XIII Purification of Naturally Occurring Protein Using Antibodies

[0195] Naturally occurring or recombinant protein is purified by immunoaffinity chromatography using antibodies specific for the protein. An immunoaffinity column is constructed by covalently coupling the antibody to CNBr-activated SEPHAROSE resin (APB). Media containing the protein is passed over the immunoaffinity column, and the column is washed using high ionic strength buffers in the presence of detergent to allow preferential absorbance of the protein. After coupling, the protein is eluted from the column using a buffer of pH 2-3 or a high concentration of urea or thiocyanate ion to disrupt antibody/protein binding, and the protein is collected.

[0196] XIV Screening for Molecules That Specifically Bind the cDNA or Protein

[0197] The cDNA or fragments thereof and the protein or portions thereof are labeled with ³²P-dCTP, Cy3-dCTP, Cy5-dCTP (APB), or BIODIPY or FITC (Molecular Probes), respectively. Candidate molecules or compounds previously arranged on a substrate are incubated in the presence of labeled nucleic or amino acid. After incubation under conditions for either a cDNA or a protein, the substrate is washed, and any position on the substrate retaining label, which indicates specific binding or complex formation, is assayed. The binding molecule is identified by its arrayed position on the substrate. Data obtained using different concentrations of the nucleic acid or protein are used to calculate affinity between the labeled nucleic acid or protein and the bound molecule. High throughput screening using very small assay volumes and very small amounts of test compound is fully described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,876,946.

[0198] All patents and publications mentioned in the specification are incorporated herein by reference. Various modifications and variations of the described method and system of the invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention. Although the invention has been described in connection with specific preferred embodiments, it should be understood that the invention as claimed should not be unduly limited to such specific embodiments. Indeed, various modifications of the described modes for carrying out the invention that are obvious to those skilled in the field of molecular biology or related fields are intended to be within the scope of the following claims. TABLE 1 Normal Obese Clone ID 1 d 2 d 8 d 15 d mean 1 d 2 d 8 d 15 d mean 4824992 −0.19 −0.43  3.02  1.80  1.05  0.59  1.27  3.46  3.11  2.11 1512213  0.29  0.76  2.20  1.59  1.21  0.38  1.58  3.19  2.63  1.94 1443766  1.57  2.22  0.71  0.33  1.21  2.52  3.04  1.53  1.54  2.16 3836253 −1.82 −3.11 −3.60 −3.36 −2.98  0.80 −0.46 −2.34 −1.66 −0.91 3360476 −2.46 −3.47 −3.43 ND −3.12  0.76 −0.39 −2.57 ND −0.73  64457 −1.46 −3.03 −2.51 −2.32 −2.33 −1.03 −2.51 −1.69 −1.89 −1.78 2379571 −2.26 −2.64 −2.30 ND −2.40 −1.54 −1.97 −2.69 ND −2.07 4655050 −2.57 −3.24 −2.59 ND −2.80 −1.60 −2.39 −2.84 ND −2.28 1447281 −2.34 −2.89 −2.40 ND −2.54 −1.42 −2.15 −2.62 ND −2.06 1453628 −1.80 −2.02 −1.38 ND −1.73 −1.40 −1.75 −1.90 ND −1.68 3087564 −2.11 −3.17 −3.28 ND −2.85 −1.20 −2.41 −3.24 ND −2.28 1368653 −1.57 −2.20 −1.90 ND −1.89 −2.85 −2.90 −3.23 ND −2.99 3141373 −1.36 −2.21 −3.41 ND −2.33 −0.24 −1.15 −3.81 ND −1.73 3215802 −1.48 −2.51 −3.49 ND −2.50 −0.15 −1.25 −3.92 ND −1.77 1968921 −1.68 −2.00 −1.52 ND −1.73 −0.66 −1.32 −2.19 ND −1.39 1259463 −2.42 −3.16 −2.82 ND −2.80 −2.12 −2.49 −2.63 ND −2.41  101894 −1.36 −2.65 −1.94 −1.24 −1.80 −1.49 −2.68 −1.99 −1.30 −1.87 1832584 −1.35 −2.36 −1.33 −1.03 −1.52 −2.21 −3.26 −2.08 −1.73 −2.32 2056395 −0.46 −1.39 −3.58 −3.34 −2.19 −0.16 −2.15 −5.10 −3.96 −2.84  557012 −0.87 −2.26 −2.05 −1.90 −1.77 −2.17 −3.35 −3.30 −3.13 −2.99 1985367 −0.76 −1.50 −1.75 −1.42 −1.36 −0.35 −1.78 −1.95 −1.83 −1.48 1674454 −1.54 −2.56 −0.75  0.37 −1.12 −2.64 −3.45 −1.91 −0.99 −2.25 2851484 −1.81 −2.62 −0.13 ND −1.52 −2.53 −2.78 −1.85 ND −2.39 3716086 −1.91 −2.77 −0.26 ND −1.65 −2.37 −2.88 −1.77 ND −2.34 5425777 −2.16 −3.01 −0.23 ND −1.80 −2.55 −3.20 −2.02 ND −2.59 1733490 −1.46 −1.97 −1.13 −1.07 −1.41 −1.30 −1.79 −1.56 −1.14 −1.45 1711151 −1.15 −2.13 −1.68 −1.27 −1.56 −1.18 −2.48 −2.25 −1.70 −1.91  433101 −1.06 −2.04 −1.37 ND −1.49 −0.90 −2.24 −1.82 ND −1.65 2581116 −0.90 −1.18 −1.41 −1.17 −1.17 −1.05 −2.04 −2.01 −1.68 −1.69 1623214 −1.26 −2.55 −0.59  0.49 −0.98 −2.63 −3.49 −1.67 −1.05 −2.21 2016229  2.12 −0.22  0.26 ND  0.72 −0.29 −0.29 −0.48 ND −0.35 1712327  1.56  1.33  0.24  0.60  0.93  0.20 −0.25 −0.33  0.19 −0.05 1512826  0.43  0.01 −1.36 ND −0.31 −1.83 −2.19 −2.47 ND −2.16 3217901  0.18  0.12 −0.80 −0.58 −0.27 −1.17 −1.48 −1.41 −0.88 −1.23 3075694 −0.06 −0.23  0.38 ND  0.03 −1.73 −2.16 −0.94 ND −1.61 2797546  0.40  1.22 −0.80 −0.88 −0.01  3.64  3.65 −1.01 −0.98  1.33 1514125  0.51 ND  0.93  0.74  0.73  1.35 ND  1.72  1.54  1.54 2697656 −0.11 ND  0.36  0.78  0.34  0.45 ND  1.53 1.4  1.13 1686585 −1.62  0.62 −1.09 −1.43 −0.88 −0.16  2.41  0.11 −0.18  0.55 1518805 −0.48 −1.38 −1.65 −1.32 −1.21  1.70 −0.10 −0.69 −1.02 −0.03 2723937 −0.6  ND −1.48 −1.45 −1.18  1.59 ND  0.04 −0.57  0.35 5063257  0.29 ND −1.46 −1.91 −1.03  0.78 ND −0.61 −0.62 −0.15 1520101 −1.58 −1.46  0.04 ND −1.00 −0.36 −0.31  0.45 ND −0.08 2495131 −1.50 −1.54 −0.38 ND −1.14 −0.39 −0.32 −0.38 ND −0.36 3769696 −1.49 ND −0.23 −0.09 −0.60 0   ND −0.21 0   −0.07 1326255 −2.22 −2.57 −1.79 −1.99 −2.14 −1.23 −0.98 −1.57 −0.91 −1.17 2173012 −1.08 ND −1.51 −1.32 −1.30  1.07 ND  0.00 0    0.36 5151345 −0.97 ND −1.59 −1.42 −1.33  0.55 ND −0.9  −0.35 −0.23 2414827 −1.57 ND −0.58 −0.19 −0.78  0.16 ND 0    0.09  0.08 2663613 −2.05 ND 0   0   −0.68  0.05 ND 0   0    0.02 2692649 −2.15 ND  0.09  0.48 −0.53 0   ND  0.77 0    0.26 3333048 −2.58 ND 0   0   −0.86  0.29 ND 0   0    0.10 1821341 −1.65 ND 0   −0.06 −0.57 0   ND 0   0    0.00 2019649  0.26 ND −1.5  −0.53 −0.59  0.15 ND 0   0    0.05  621508  0.18 ND −1.63 0.29 −0.39  0.17 ND 0.2  0.26  0.21  623916  0.48 ND −1.41 −0.03 −0.32 0   ND 0   0    0.00  112853  1.77  4.55  2.87  2.52  2.93  2.03  4.39  1.65  2.59  2.67 2480493 −2.07 −2.28 −1.71 ND −2.02 −1.79 −2.43 −2.77 ND −2.33 2643094 −2.06 −3.19 −2.84 −3.00 −2.77 −1.52 −2.98 −2.87 −2.34 −2.43 2475740 −1.62 −1.35  2.70 ND −0.09 −1.47 −1.35  1.74 ND −0.36

[0199] TABLE 2 SEQ ID NO Template ID Clone ID Start Stop  1 1446826.8 4824992 1296  1721  2 209356CB1 1512213 1004  1527  3 1446432.8 1443766 3105  4176  4 2109262CB1 3836253  4 1554  4 2109262CB1 3360476 298  584  5 063351CB1  64457  2 2055  6 063003CB1 2379571  32  337  7 4655050CB1 4655050  46 1543  8 063540CB1 1447281 300  702  9 3119737CB1 1453628 658 1162 10 2634931CB1 3087564 361  636 11 1440138CB1 1368653 2879  3377 12 411388CB1 3141373  90  183 12 411388CB1 3215802  86  438 13 2543010CB1 1968921 1610  2256 14 100164CB1 1259463 1286  2329 14 100164CB1  101894 421  917 15 899248.6 1832584 4040  4534 16 1519595CB1 2056395 847 1544 16 1519595CB1 2056395 938 2657 17 063646CB1  557012 544 1851 18 1301477CB1 1985367 436 1937 19 269059.26 1674454 507 2310 20 5425777CA2 2851484 620 1138 20 5425777CA2 3716086 549  858 20 5425777CA2 5425777  1 1395 21 2019981CB1 1733490 2422  3919 22 1250434CB1 1711151 2299  2784 23 1383585.7  433101 175  712 24 2456481CB1 2581116 1522  2093 25 809809CB1 1623214 1428  1881 26 227484.13 2016229 1534  1866 27 1712327CB1 1712327 1675  2673 28 2124411CB1 1512826 1456  1968 28 2124411CB1 3217901 429 1634 29 235636.1 3075694 336 4569 30 2602214CB1 2797546  1 1687 31 238716.1 1514125 1206  2442 32 899473.7 2697656 483 1074 33 1453266.4 1686585  1  223 34 696973CB1 1518805 558 1939 35 346431.1 2723937 659 2203 36 1382919.4 5063257 1925  2401 37 947429CB1 1520101 788 1145 38 697785CB1 2495131  21  328 39 238469.9 3769696 789 1640 40 047593.1 1326255  1  794 41 406006.1 2173012  1  676 42 217973.1 5151345 539 1415 43 334430.1 2414827  1  332 44 237113.1 2663613 617 1025 45 006529.1 2692649 479  957 46 006529.2 2692649  1  253 47 980793.1 3333048 1204  1557 48 158822.1 1821341 323  935 49 069200.1 2019649  81  369 50 234958.1  621508  1  599 51 350411.11  623916 260  569 52 1383759.1  112853 115 5479 53 237135.1 2480493 1697  2365 54 7694107.3 2643094 1252  2887 55 899317.1 2475740 558 1361

[0200] TABLE 3 SEQ ID NO Template ID Clone ID GenBank ID E-value Annotation  1 446826.8 4824992 g871885 6.00E−34 [Homo sapiens] unknown product specific to adipose tissue  2 209356CB1 1512213 g726513 0 [Homo sapiens] nuclear orphan receptor LXR-alpha  3 1446432.8 1443766 g6634454 0 [Homo sapiens] betaglycan  4 2109262CB1 3360476 g1877212 0 [Homo sapiens] IL-13 receptor  4 2109262CB1 3836253 g1877212 0 [Homo sapiens] IL-13 receptor  5 063351CB1  64457 g306798 0 [Homo sapiens] pregnancy-specific beta-glycoprotein d  6 063003CB1 2379571 g337667 0 [Homo sapiens] pregnancy-specific beta-1-glycoprotein 11  7 8175223CB1 4655050 g190647 0 [Homo sapiens] pregnancy-specific beta-1-glycoprotein  8 063540CB1 1447281 g609316 0 [Homo sapiens] pregnancy-specific beta 1-glycoprotein 4  9 3119737CB1 1453628 g36034 e-110 [Homo sapiens] rhoG 10 2634931CB1 3087564 g9558479 e-162 [Mus musculus] cysteine-richprotease inhibitor 11 1440138CB1 1368653 g253483 0 [Homo sapiens] N-cadherin 12 411388CB1 3141373 g182483 e-123 [Homo sapiens] prefibroblast collagenase inhibitor 12 411388CB1 3215802 g182483 e-123 [Homo sapiens] prefibroblast collagenase inhibitor 13 2543010CB1 1968921 g6172373 0 [Homo sapiens] ISLR 14 100164CB1  101894 g825696 0 [Homo sapiens] novH 14 100164CB1 1259463 g825696 0 [Homo sapiens] novH 15 899248.6 1832584 g4929267 0 Human LOMP protein mRNA, complete cds. 16 1519595CB1 2056395 g339567 0 [Homo sapiens] transforming growth factor induced protein 16 1519595CB1 2056395 g339568 0 [Homo sapiens] transforming growth factor induced protein 17 063646CB1  557012 g189563 0 [Homo sapiens] plasminogen activator inhibitor type 2 18 1301477CB1 1985367 g1890050 0 [Homo sapiens] cysteine protease 19 269059.26 1674454 g180924 0 [Homo sapiens] connective tissue growth factor 20 5425777CA2 2851484 g177175 e-112 [Homo sapiens] smooth muscle protein 20 5425777CA2 3716086 g177175 e-112 [Homo sapiens] smooth muscle protein 20 5425777CA2 5425777 g177175 e-112 [Homo sapiens] smooth muscle protein 21 2019981CB1 1733490 g188626 0 [Homo sapiens] moesin B 22 1250434CB1 1711151 g1144013 0 [Homo sapiens] ARNT interacting protein 23 1383585.7  433101 g4588524 e-141 [Homo sapiens] intracellular chloride channel p64H1 24 2456481CB1 2581116 g339677 0 [Homo sapiens] thrombin receptor 25 809809CB1 1623214 g3252872 0 [Homo sapiens] BRCA1-associated protein 2 26 227484.13 2016229 g2654160 0 Human orphan G-protein-coupled receptor (GPR39) mRNA, complete cds. 27 1712327CB1 1712327 g348918 0 [Homo sapiens] hWNT5A proto-oncogene 28 2124411CB1 1512826 g2920804 0 [Homo sapiens] frizzled-related protein frpHE 28 2124411CB1 3217901 g2920804 0 [Homo sapiens] frizzled-related protein frpHE 29 7495634CB1 3075694 g2865219 0 [Homo sapiens] integrin binding protein Del-1 30 2602214CB1 2797546 g36629 0 [Homo sapiens] metalloproteinase stromolysin-2 31 238716.1 1514125 Incyte Unique 32 899473.7 2697656 Incyte Unique 33 1453266.4 1686585 g452059 0 Human insulin-like growth factor binding protein 5 (IGFBP5) mRNA. 34 696973CB1 1518805 g30126 0 [Homo sapiens] type I interstitial collagenase 35 346431.12  723937 Incyte Unique 36 1382919.7 85063257  g4731323 0 Human H19 gene, complete sequence. 37 947429CB1 1520101 g6165625 0 [Homo sapiens] procollagen C-terminal proteinase enhancer protein 2 (PCOLCE2) 38 697785CB1 2495131 g184228 7.00E-77 [Homo sapiens] 14 kDa beta-galactoside-binding lectin 39 238469.9 3769696 Incyte Unique 40 047593.1 1326255 Incyte Unique 41 406006.1 2173012 Incyte Unique 42 217973.1 5151345 Incyte Unique 43 334430.1 2414827 Incyte Unique 44 237113.1 2663613 Incyte Unique 45 006529.1 2692649 Incyte Unique 46 006529.2 2692649 Incyte Unique 47 980793.1 3333048 Incyte Unique 48 158822.1 1821341 Incyte Unique 49 069200.1 2019649 Incyte Unique 50 234958.1  621508 Incyte Unique 51 350411.1 623916 Incyte Unique 52 1383759.1  112853 g9664881 0 [Homo sapiens] cannabinoid receptor 53 237135.1 2480493 g1088443 0 [Homo sapiens] G-protein-coupled receptor 54 7694107.3 2643094 g2116672 0 [Homo sapiens] EAR-1r nuclear hormone receptor 55 899317.1 2475740 g7363342 0 [Homo sapiens] chemokine receptor CCR11

[0201]

1 55 1 1736 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 1446826.8 1 acaggtgcac ttccaaacaa ctccctctag gggctgaccc cgcagcacta gaagcaggta 60 tgtgccagca gaccaagcct gtgtggcagg ggcttcccag cgctccagaa taggggagac 120 accagcagag gtgcaagaaa cagccccgga caggaagcgg tagagagacc cagaaaggca 180 gggtgggtgt gcactggcct ccaggtcctg aaggcctact ctggagtggg agtataccca 240 gctgggtggg gcctgaccta caccccttgt gtgccagggg aatgtatctt gcaagctgtt 300 ttgctgcacc caaggatgat cttctccact caggcccagg tccctaagtc ccctcctaac 360 agccacaagt catactctct agcgccttgc ctgccccatc tcaggaaagg tgacctgaga 420 ggcccaagct tattcctgcc ctccctgagc catgcttcct gcccaacttc ctaaggcttc 480 ggtgacagac ggcaatctcc ttgcctgggc tgcacaggca cactgccctc tcccccttgg 540 ggttgcatgg tctgcaagtg cacacacctg tatctcgccc tctcagggga aagatttacc 600 aggccctctc cggctgcatc cactgggtct ctggctacag gcagagagcc agtcagcagt 660 gcccctgcag ctgtttgggg ctgggggctc cgatgatgcc agagccctag ggtttacagg 720 cacctaggca gattcgagga tccaagtccc tgccacatgc gtttgggtga gaccgacctc 780 actgcctcag tttcctccta tacactgatg ctatcaacaa aaatacccac ttcaggaggt 840 ggttgtaaag attatacaag agactgcaga gcgttaggca gcacctggca caagacaaat 900 gctcagtaaa agaccactgc tgtcattaag gtcaacacca gccctgagct cctgccctgg 960 agctgaccca gcgctcacgc ccaggatcag aaagggaggg ctggggctga tgagctggga 1020 ggtggtgtgc gcccttctcc tgcctccagc tcctctctgg acccctgtcc tggcacctct 1080 tcggtccctg gttcggtctg cccctttccc accgcggccc gtcttaggcc aggatgtgct 1140 ccctgccctg cggactctgg agcagggccc ggccactccc cggagcctgt atgacgggaa 1200 ccgccccgcg ccctctcccc tacgcggggc aggccagccc tggggcgcct taaaaaccgg 1260 agctggcgct tggcatcgcc actctgggca ggatccaacg tcgctccagc tgctcttgac 1320 gactccacag ataccccgaa gccatggcaa gcaagggctt gcaggacctg aagcaacagg 1380 tggaggggac cgcccaggaa gccgtgtcag cggccggagc ggcagctcag caagtggtgg 1440 accaggccac agaggcgggg cagaaagcca tggaccagct ggccaagacc acccaggaaa 1500 ccatcgacaa gactgctaac caggcctctg acaccttctc tgggatcggg aaaaaattcg 1560 gcctcctgaa atgacagcag ggagacttgg gtcggcctcc tgaaatgata gcagggagac 1620 ttgggtgacc ccccttccag gcgccatcta gcacagcctg gccctgatct ccgggcagcc 1680 accacctcct cggtctgccc cctcattaaa attcacgttc ccaaaaaaaa aaaccc 1736 2 1666 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 209356CB1 2 ctgggtcctg cttgtgctca gctccagctc actggctggc caccgagact tctggacagg 60 aaactgcacc atcctcttct cccagcaagg gggctccaga gactgcccac ccaggaagtc 120 tggtggcctg gggatttgga cagtgccttg gtaatgacca gggctccagg aagagatgtc 180 cttgtggctg ggggcccctg tgcctgacat tcctcctgac tctgcggtgg agctgtggaa 240 gccaggcgca caggatgcaa gcagccaggc ccagggaggc agcagctgca tcctcagaga 300 ggaagccagg atgccccact ctgctggggg tactgcaggg gtggggctgg aggctgcaga 360 gcccacagcc ctgctcacca gggcagagcc cccttcagaa cccacagaga tccgtccaca 420 aaagcggaaa aaggggccag cccccaaaat gctggggaac gagctatgca gcgtgtgtgg 480 ggacaaggcc tcgggcttcc actacaatgt tctgagctgc gagggctgca agggattctt 540 ccgccgcagc gtcatcaagg gagcgcacta catctgccac agtggcggcc actgccccat 600 ggacacctac atgcgtcgca agtgccagga gtgtcggctt cgcaaatgcc gtcaggctgg 660 catgcgggag gagtgtgtcc tgtcagaaga acagatccgc ctgaagaaac tgaagcggca 720 agaggaggaa caggctcatg ccacatcctt gccccccagg gcttcctcac ccccccaaat 780 cctgccccag ctcagcccgg aacaactggg catgatcgag aagctcgtcg ctgcccagca 840 acagtgtaac cggcgctcct tttctgaccg gcttcgagtc acgccttggc ccatggcacc 900 agatccccat agccgggagg cccgtcagca gcgctttgcc cacttcactg agctggccat 960 cgtctctgtg caggagatag ttgactttgc taaacagcta cccggcttcc tgcagctcag 1020 ccgggaggac cagattgccc tgctgaagac ctctgcgatc gaggtgatgc ttctggagac 1080 atctcggagg tacaaccctg ggagtgagag tatcaccttc ctcaaggatt tcagttataa 1140 ccgggaagac tttgccaaag cagggctgca agtggaattc atcaacccca tcttcgagtt 1200 ctccagggcc atgaatgagc tgcaactcaa tgatgccgag tttgccttgc tcattgctat 1260 cagcatcttc tctgcagacc ggcccaacgt gcaggaccag ctccaggtag agaggctgca 1320 gcacacatat gtggaagccc tgcatgccta cgtctccatc caccatcccc atgaccgact 1380 gatgttccca cggatgctaa tgaaactggt gagcctccgg accctgagca gcgtccactc 1440 agagcaagtg tttgcactgc gtctgcagga caaaaagctc ccaccgctgc tctctgagat 1500 ctgggatgtg cacgaatgac tgttctgtcc ccatattttc tgttttcttg gccggatggc 1560 tgaggcctgg tggctgcctc ctagaagtgg aacagactga gaagggcaaa cattcctggg 1620 agctgggcaa ggagatcctc ccgtggcatt aaaagagagt caaagg 1666 3 4224 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 1446432.8 3 tctttaagat ttgtagctac taagaaagaa aggagctttt tttccttggg ccttcaaact 60 gaaagaaccg catgagcctg acggcgcatg gtcttaacat caggctgtgc aggaagaagc 120 tatctgcaga tggatgccag cacacacaag gaagcagagc tctggcaaca ttgagtcaaa 180 gcaaggacac aacatcagag ggacggcaga gaatccttgt gtgtagtctt tggtggcagt 240 ttgaaaattg caaggaggga ctttaagact acttctgatt tgcaaagatg gtctgtgctc 300 cgagcaggct aaagtgactg gacgagacgc actgttggag aaataaaaat gacttcccat 360 tatgtgattg ccatctttgc cctgatgagc ttctgtttag ccactgcagg tccagagcct 420 ggtgcactgt gtgaactgtc acctgtcagt gcctcccatc ctgtccaggc cttgatggag 480 agcttcactg ttttgtcagg ctgtgccagc agaggcacaa ctgggctgcc acaggaggtg 540 catgtcctga atctccgcac tgcaggccag gggcctggcc agctacagag agaggtcaca 600 cttcacctga atcccatctc ctcagtccac atccaccaca agtctgttgt gttcctgctc 660 aactccccac accccctggt gtggcatctg aagacagaga gacttgccac tggggtctcc 720 agactgtttt tggtgtctga gggttctgtg gtccagtttt catcagcaaa cttctccttg 780 acagcagaaa cagaagaaag gaacttcccc catggaaatg aacatctgtt aaattgggcc 840 cgaaaagagt atggagcagt tacttcattc accgaactca agatagcaag aaacatttat 900 attaaagtgg gggaagatca agtgttccct ccaaagtgca acatagggaa gaattttctc 960 tcactcaatt accttgctga gtaccttcaa cccaaagcag cagaagggtg tgtgatgtcc 1020 agccagcccc agaatgagga agtacacatc atcgagctaa tcacccccaa ctctaacccc 1080 tacagtgctt tccaggtgga tataacaatt gatataagac cttctcaaga ggatcttgaa 1140 gtggtcaaaa atctcatcct gatcttgaag tgcaaaaagt ctgtcaactg ggtgatcaaa 1200 tcttttgatg ttaagggaag cctgaaaatt attgctccta acagtattgg ctttggaaaa 1260 gagagtgaaa gatctatgac aatgaccaaa tcaataagag atgacattcc ttcaacccaa 1320 gggaatctgg tgaagtgggc tttggacaat ggctatagtc caataacttc atacacaatg 1380 gctcctgtgg ctaatagatt tcatcttcgg cttgaaaata atgcagagga gatgggagat 1440 gaggaagtcc acactattcc tcctgagcta cggatcctgc tggaccctgg tgccctgcct 1500 gccctgcaga acccgcccat ccggggaggg gaaggccaaa atggaggcct tccatttcct 1560 ttcccagata tttccaggag agtctggaat gaagagggag aagatgggct ccctcggcca 1620 aaggaccctg tcattcccag catacaactg tttcctggtc tcagagagcc agaagaggtg 1680 caagggagcg tggatattgc cctgtctgtc aaatgtgaca atgagaagat gatcgtggct 1740 gtagaaaaag attcttttca ggccagtggc tactcgggga tggacgtcac cctgttggat 1800 cctacctgca aggccaagat gaatggcaca cactttgttt tggagtctcc tctgaatggc 1860 tgcggtactc ggccccggtg gtcagccctt gatggtgtgg tctactataa ctccattgtg 1920 atacaggttc cagcccttgg ggacagtagt ggttggccag atggttatga agatctggag 1980 tcaggtgata atggatttcc gggagatatg gatgaaggag atgcttccct gttcacccga 2040 cctgaaatcg tggtgtttaa ttgcagcctt cagcaggtga ggaaccccag cagcttccag 2100 gaacagcccc acggaaacat caccttcaac atggagctat acaacactga cctctttttg 2160 gtgccctccc agggcgtctt ctctgtgcca gagaatggac acgtttatgt tgaggtatct 2220 gttactaagg ctgaacaaga actgggattt gccatccaaa cgtgctttat ctctccatat 2280 tcgaaccctg ataggatgtc tcattacacc attattgaga atatttgtcc taaagatgaa 2340 tctgtgaaat tctacagtcc caagagagtg cactttccta tcccgcaagc tgacatggat 2400 aagaagcgat tcagctttgt cttcaagcct gtcttcaaca cctcactgct ctttctacag 2460 tgtgagctga cgctgtgtac gaagatggag aagcaccccc agaagttgcc taagtgtgtg 2520 cctcctgacg aagcctgcac ctcgctggac gcctcgataa tctgggccat gatgcagaat 2580 aagaagacgt tcaccaagcc ccttgctgtg atccaccatg aagcagaatc taaagaaaaa 2640 ggtccaagca tgaaggaacc aaatccaatt tctccaccaa ttttccatgg tctggacacc 2700 ctaaccgtga tgggcattgc gtttgcagcc tttgtgatcg gagcactcct gacgggggcc 2760 ttgtggtaca tctattctca cacaggggag acagcaggaa ggcagcaagt ccccacctcc 2820 ccgccagcct cggaaaacag cagtgctgcc cacagcatcg gcagcacgca gagcacgcct 2880 tgctccagca gcagcacggc ctagcccaac ccagcccaac ccggcccaac ccagcccagc 2940 ccagctcagc tcagctactg ccaagggcag gaccaatggc tgagcctcgt gtccagactc 3000 agagggctgg attttggttc ccttgtaaag acagagtgaa tttcagtata aagatcaccc 3060 gttgtattca ccccacaccc agggctagta taaacatgac cctgggcttc tgtaccacac 3120 tagaattcat gtgagaaagc taaaatggtg gtcttctcca ccagcccctc acaggcttgg 3180 gggttttcaa tgtgaaacac atgccagttt ttaaaatgct gctttgtcca ggtgagaaca 3240 tccataattt ggggccctga gttttaccca gactcaagga gttggtaaag ggttaatagc 3300 cagatagtag aaccagtgag gagatgcggc caaagattct ttatatctga accaagatgt 3360 aaaacaagaa atgctttgag gctttctaag cgatcctcct gtctaatttg cacctttgtc 3420 tggatgcaca cttctgacct tgctgccaca acctgtgggg tctgatgtgt cccttgatgg 3480 gtgctgccct cagggactgc accctgacaa gtgttaaggc aacattcctt tcttgtgccc 3540 tgggccaaaa ccaatgctga tgaccttatc agcttcctgt ttcttcccat acttgcatac 3600 accactgcaa aatgtcttaa tgcaaatttt gtatttctta caggcctaca gaaattgaaa 3660 atgaccaaaa tcaggaacca cagatttgtg cccattccta atattttgtt ctgcaaatta 3720 atgtataatt tgaggtgaaa ttcagttata aagtcaagga cgaatttgca cagtgatata 3780 tttctatgtg tatgcaagta caagtatata atatgtcacc tggcacattc attttctcag 3840 ttgaagaaga gaaaatttga aaatgtcctt atgcttttag agttgcaact taagtatatt 3900 tggtagggtg agtgtttcca ctcaaaatat gtcaacttaa aaaaaaatag gccctttcat 3960 aaaaaccaaa ctctagcaag atgcaaatgc atggcaaatc ctgtcggtct ccagttggtt 4020 atctgaatag tgtcaccaat tccaccaaga cagtgctgag attggaaaag ggcactcatt 4080 tggattgcct tacttctctt gccttaaata tatcccatat atttaatatg tcaaaaaggg 4140 cttgaggtga atttcattaa atggaataat atgatgccac tttgcagcta aaataagctc 4200 agtgatacct ccttgttaaa aaaa 4224 4 1616 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 2109262CB1 4 gctgttcatt gagacagact tcagtggtat tacagaattt ggttacaact ggacacattg 60 ttcatataga gtccccctgg tccttgtgaa aaactccggt gttcctggta accacatagt 120 gtataaagcc cctcattgca ctagtgacaa tcctgtaacc cagaagcaaa tgagagaatt 180 gtctttgtgt tcatttgggg gagacggttg ctatggagat ggatgatatc ataactccat 240 tgtgaaccag taagaacact ctcgtgagtc taacggtctt ccggatgaag gctatttgaa 300 gtcgccataa cctggtcaga agtgtgcctg tcggcgggga gagaggcaat atcaaggttt 360 taaatctcgg agaaatggct ttcgtttgct tggctatcgg atgcttatat acctttctga 420 taagcacaac atttggctgt acttcatctt cagacaccga gataaaagtt aaccctcctc 480 aggattttga gatagtggat cccggatact taggttatct ctatttgcaa tggcaacccc 540 cactgtctct ggatcatttt aaggaatgca cagtggaata tgaactaaaa taccgaaaca 600 ttggtagtga aacatggaag accatcatta ctaagaatct acattacaaa gatgggtttg 660 atcttaacaa gggcattgaa gccgagatac acacgctttt accatggcaa tgcacaaatg 720 gatccagagt tcaaagttcc tgggcagaaa ctaactattg gatatcacca caaggaattc 780 cagaaactaa agttcaggat atggattgcg tatattacaa ttggcaatat ttactctgtt 840 cttggaaacc tggcataggt gtacttcttg ataccaatta caacttgttt tactggtatg 900 agggcttgga tcatgcatta cagtgtgttg attacatcaa ggctgatgga caaaatatag 960 gatgcagatt tccctatttg gaggcatcag actataaaga tttctatatt tgtgttaatg 1020 gatcatcaga gaacaagcct atcagatcca gttatttcac ttttcagctt caaaatatag 1080 ttaaaccttt gccgccagtc tatcttactt ttactcggga gagttcatgt gaaattaagc 1140 tgaaatggag catacctttg ggacctattc cagcaaggtg ttttgattat gaaattgaga 1200 tcagagaaga tgatactacc ttggtgactg ctacagttga aaatgaaaca tacaccttga 1260 aaacaacaaa tgaaacccga caattatgct ttgtagtaag aagcaaagtg aatatttatt 1320 gctcagatga cggaatttgg agtgagtgga gtgataaaca atgctgggaa ggtgaagacc 1380 tatcgaagaa aactttgcta cgtttctggc taccatttgg tttcatctta atattagtta 1440 tatttgtaac cggtctgctt ttgcgtaagc caaacaccta cccaaaaatg attccagaat 1500 ttttctgtga tacatgaaga ctttccatat caagagacat ggtattgact caacagtttc 1560 cagtcatggc caaatgttca atatgagtct caataaactg aatttttctt gcgaat 1616 5 2134 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 063351CB1 5 gagaattgct cctgccctgg gaagaggctc agcacagaaa gaggaaggac agcacagctg 60 cacagccgtg ctcagagagt ttctggttcc taggcttatc tccacagagg agaacacaca 120 agcagcagag accatgggaa ccctctcagc ccctccctgc acacagcgca tcaaatggaa 180 ggggctcctg ctcacagcat cacttttaaa cttctggaac ctgcccacca ctgcccaagt 240 cacgattgaa gccgagccaa ccaaagtttc cgaggggaag gatgttcttc tacttgtcca 300 caatttgccc cagaatctta ccggctacat ctggtacaaa gggcaaatga gggacctcta 360 ccattacatt acatcatatg tagtagacgg tgaaataatt atatatgggc ctgcatatag 420 tggacgagaa acagcatatt ccaatgcatc cctgctgatc cagaatgtca cccgggagga 480 cgcaggatcc tacaccttac acatcataaa gggagatgat gggactagag gagtaactgg 540 acgtttcacc ttcaccttac acctggagac tcctaagccc tccatctcca gcagcaactt 600 aaatcccagg gagaccatgg aggctgtgag cttaacctgt gaccctgaga ctccagacgc 660 aagctacctg tggtggatga atggtcagag cctccctatg actcacagct tgaagctgtc 720 cgaaaccaac aggaccctct ttctattggg tgtcacaaag tatactgcag gaccctatga 780 atgtgaaata cggaacccag tgagtgccag ccgcagtgac ccagtcaccc tgaatctcct 840 cccgaagctg cccaagccct acatcaccat caacaactta aaccccaggg agaataagga 900 tgtcttaaac ttcacctgtg aacctaagag tgagaactac acctacattt ggtggctaaa 960 tggtcagagc ctcccggtca gtcccagggt aaagcgaccc attgaaaaca ggatcctcat 1020 tctacccagt gtcacgagaa atgaaacagg accctatcaa tgtgaaatac gggaccgata 1080 tggtggcatc cgcagtgacc cagtcaccct gaatgtcctc tatggtccag acctccccag 1140 aatttaccct tcattcacct attaccgttc aggagaagtc ctctacttgt cctgttctgc 1200 ggactctaac ccaccggcac agtattcttg gacaattaat gaaaagtttc agctaccagg 1260 acaaaagctc tttatccgcc atattactac aaagcatagc gggctctatg tttgctctgt 1320 tcgtaactca gccactggca aggaaagctc caaatccatg acagtcgaag tctctgactg 1380 gacagttccc tgaattctac tagtacctcc aattccattt tctcccatgg aatcactaag 1440 agcaagaccc actctgttcc agaagcccta taagctggag gtggacaact caatgtaaat 1500 ttcatgggaa aacccttgta cgtgaagcat gagccactca gaactcacca aaatattcga 1560 caccataaca acagatgctc aaactgtaaa ccaggacaac aagtggatga cttcacactg 1620 tggacagttt ttcccaagat gtcagaacaa gactccccat catgatgagg ctctcccccc 1680 tcttaactgt ccttgctcat gcctgcctct ttcacttggc aggataatgc agtcattaga 1740 atttcacatg tagtagcttc tgagagtaac aacagagtgt cagatatgtc atctcaacct 1800 caaactttta cataacatct cagggggaaa tgtggctctc tccaccttgc atacagggct 1860 cccaatagaa atgaacacag agatattgcc tgtgtgtttg cagagaagat ggtttgtatg 1920 aagacgtagg aaagctgaaa ttataataga gtccccttta aatccacatt gtgtggatgg 1980 ctcttgccgt ttcctaagag atacattgta aaacgtgaca gtaagacatt ctagcagaat 2040 aaaacatgta cctggggtaa ccgnntccca gaanaagnca aacccccttt ngttngggtt 2100 gtgggaangc ctgttaancc cnggcncttg nngg 2134 6 1698 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 063003CB1 6 cacagctgac agccgtgctc agacagcttc tggatcccag gctcatctcc acagaggaga 60 acacacaggc agcagagacc atggggcccc tcccagcccc ttcctgcaca cagcgcatca 120 cctggaaggg gctcctgctc acagcatcac ttttaaactt ctggaacccg cccaccactg 180 ccgaagtcac gattgaagcc cagccaccca aagtttctga ggggaaggat gttcttctac 240 ttgtccacaa tttgccccag aatcttcctg gctacttctg gtacaaaggg gaaatgacgg 300 acctctacca ttacattata tcgtatatag ttgatggtaa aataattata tatgggcctg 360 catacagtgg aagagaaaca gtatattcca acgcatccct gctgatccag aatgtcaccc 420 ggaaggatgc aggaacctac accttacaca tcataaagcg aggtgatgag actagagaag 480 aaattcgaca tttcaccttc accttatact tggagactcc caagccctac atctccagca 540 gcaacttaaa ccccagggag gccatggagg ctgtgcgctt aatctgtgat cctgagactc 600 tggacgcaag ctacctatgg tggatgaatg gtcagagcct ccctgtgact cacaggttgc 660 agctgtccaa aaccaacagg accctctatc tatttggtgt cacaaagtat attgcaggac 720 cctatgaatg tgaaatacgg aacccagtga gtgccagtcg cagtgaccca gtcaccctga 780 atctcctccc gaagctgccc atcccctaca tcaccatcaa caacttaaac cccagggaga 840 ataaggatgt cttagccttc acctgtgaac ctaagagtga gaactacacc tacatttggt 900 ggctaaacgg tcagagcctc cccgtcagtc ccggggtaaa gcgacccatt gaaaacagga 960 tactcattct acccagtgtc acgagaaatg aaacaggacc ctatcaatgt gaaatacggg 1020 accgatatgg tggcatccgc agttacccag tcaccctgaa tgtcctctat ggtccagacc 1080 tccccagaat ttacccttca ttcacctatt accgttcagg agaaaacctc gacttgtcct 1140 gcttcacgga atctaaccca ccggcagagt atttttggac aattaatggg aagtttcagc 1200 aatcaggaca aaagctcttt atcccccaaa ttactagaaa tcatagcggg ctctatgctt 1260 gctctgttca taactcagcc actggcaagg aaatctccaa atccatgaca gtcaaagtct 1320 ctggtccctg ccatggagac ctgacagagt ctcagtcatg actgcaacaa ctgagacact 1380 gagaaaaaga acaggctgat accttcatga aattcaagac aaagaagaaa aaaactcaat 1440 gttattggac taaataatca aaaggataat gttttcataa ttttttattg gaaaatgtgc 1500 tgattctttg aatgttttat tctccagatt tatgaacttt ttttcttcag caattggtaa 1560 agtatacttt tgtaaacaaa aattgaaata tttgcttttg ctgtctatct gaatgcccca 1620 gaattgtgaa actattcatg agtattcata ggtttatggt aataaagtta tttgcacatg 1680 ttcaaaaaaa aaaaaaaa 1698 7 1562 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 8175223CB1 7 gggcaggtcg ggaagagtct cagcgcagaa ggaggaagga cagcacagct gacagccgtg 60 ctctggaagc ttctggatcc taggctcatc tccacagagg agaacatgca cgcagcagag 120 atcatggggc ccctctcagc ccctccctgc acagagcaca tcaaatggaa ggggctcctg 180 ctcacagcat tacttttaaa cttctggaac ttgcctacca ctgcccaagt catgattgaa 240 gcccagccac ccaaagtgtc cgaggggaag gatgttcttc tacttgtcca caatttgccc 300 cagaatctta ctggctacat ctggtacaaa ggacaaatca gggacctcta ccattacatt 360 acatcatatg tagtagacgg tcaaataatt atatatggac cggcatacag tggacgagaa 420 acagtatatt ccaatgcatc cctgctgatc cagaatgtca cccgggagga cgcaggatcc 480 tacaccttac acatcataaa gcgaggtgat gggactagag gagtaactgg atatttcacc 540 ttcaccttat acctggagac tcccaagccc tccatctcca gcagcaactt aaaccccagg 600 gaggccatgg agactgtgat cttaacctgt aatcctgaga ctccggacgc aagctacctg 660 tggtggatga atggtcagag cctccctatg actcatagga tgcagctgtc tgaaaccaac 720 aggaccctct ttctatttgg tgtcacaaag tatactgcag gaccctatga atgtgaaata 780 tggaactcag ggagtgccag ccgcagtgac ccagtcaccc tgaatctcct ccatggtcca 840 gacctcccca gaattttccc ttcagtcacc tcttactatt caggagagaa cctcgacttg 900 tcctgcttcg caaactctaa cccaccagca cagtattctt ggacaattaa tgggaagttt 960 cagctatcag gacaaaagct ctttatccct cagattactc caaagcataa tgggctctat 1020 gcttgctctg ctcgtaactc agccactggc gaggaaagct ccacatcctt gacaatcaga 1080 gtcattgctc ctccaggatt aggaactttt gctttcaata atccaacgta gcagccgtga 1140 tgtcattttt gtatttcagg aagactggca ggagatttat ggaaaagact atgaaaagga 1200 ctcttgaata caagttcctg ataacttcaa gatcatacca ctggactaag aactttcaaa 1260 attttgatga acaggctgat accttcatga aattcaagac aaagaagaaa agaactccat 1320 ttcattggac taaataacaa aaggataatg ttttcataat tttttattgg aaaatgtgct 1380 gattttttga atgttttatc ctccagattt atgaattttt ttcttcagca attggtaaag 1440 tatacttttg taaacaaaaa ttgaaacatt tgcttttgct ctctgagtgc cccagaatgg 1500 gaatctattc atgaatattc atatgtttat ggtactaaag ttatttgcac aagtttaaaa 1560 aa 1562 8 1787 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 063540CB1 8 acagcacagc tgacagccgt actcaggaag cttctggatc ctaggcttat ctccacagag 60 gagaacacac aagcagcaga gaccatgggg cccctctcag cccctccctg cacacacctc 120 atcacttgga agggggtcct gctcacagca tcacttttaa acttctggaa tccgcccaca 180 actgcccaag tcacgattga agcccagcca cccaaagttt ctgaggggaa ggatgttctt 240 ctacttgtcc acaatttgcc ccagaatctt gctggctaca tttggtacaa agggcaaatg 300 acatacctct accattacat tacatcatat gtagtagacg gtcaaagaat tatatatggg 360 cctgcataca gtggaagaga aagagtatat tccaatgcat ccctgctgat ccagaatgtc 420 acgcaggagg atgcaggatc ctacacctta cacatcataa agcgacgcga tgggactgga 480 ggagtaactg gacatttcac cttcacctta cacctggaga ctcccaagcc ctccatctcc 540 agcagcaact taaatcccag ggaggccatg gaggctgtga tcttaacctg tgatcctgcg 600 actccagccg caagctacca gtggtggatg aatggtcaga gcctccctat gactcacagg 660 ttgcagctgt ccaaaaccaa caggaccctc tttatatttg gtgtcacaaa gtatattgca 720 ggaccctatg aatgtgaaat acggaaccca gtgagtgcca gccgcagtga cccagtcacc 780 ctgaatctcc tcccaaagct gtccaagccc tacatcacaa tcaacaactt aaaccccaga 840 gagaataagg atgtcttaac cttcacctgt gaacctaaga gtgagaacta cacctacatt 900 tggtggctaa atggtcagag cctccctgtc agtcccaggg taaagcgacc cattgaaaac 960 aggatcctca ttctacccaa tgtcacgaga aatgaaacag gaccttatca atgtgaaata 1020 cgggaccgat atggtggcat ccgcagtgac ccagtcaccc tgaatgtcct ctatggtcca 1080 gacctcccca gcatttaccc ttcattcacc tattaccgtt caggagaaaa cctctacttg 1140 tcctgcttcg ccgagtctaa cccacgggca caatattctt ggacaattaa tgggaagttt 1200 cagctatcag gacaaaagct ctctatcccc caaataacta caaagcatag tgggctctat 1260 gcttgctctg ttcgtaactc agccactggc aaggaaagct ccaaatccat cacagtcaaa 1320 gtctctgact ggatattacc ctgaattcta ctagttcctc caattccatt ttctcccatg 1380 gaatcacgaa gagcaagacc cactctgttc cagaagccct ataagctgga ggtggacaac 1440 tcgatgtaaa tttcatggga aaacccttgt acctgacatg tgagccactc agaactcacc 1500 aaaatgttcg acaccataac aacagctact caaactgtaa accaggataa caagttgatg 1560 acttcacact gtggacagtt tttccaaaga tgtcagaaca agactcccca tcatgataag 1620 gctcccaccc ctcttaaccg tccttgctca tgcctgcctc tttcacttgg caggataagg 1680 cagtcattag aatttcacat gtagtagctt ctgagggtaa caacagagtg tcagatatgt 1740 catctcaacc tcaaactttt acgtaacatc tcaggggaaa tgtgggg 1787 9 1198 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 3119737CB1 9 cccggacctg ccggcagggg ctctggcctc ctgaggtccg agtcggagcc ccttcccttc 60 tcctcccagc ttcccggaac ctgccccgcc gggcgagggg cgagggaact tcaactcaga 120 cgccccagcc cccaggcctt gacttcatct cagctccaga gcccgccctc tcttcctgca 180 gcctgggaac ttcagccggc tggagcccca ccatggctgc aatccgaaag aagctggtga 240 tcgttgggga tggtgcctgt gggaagacct gcctcctcat cgtcttcagc aaggatcagt 300 ttccggaggt ctacgtccct actgtctttg agaactatat tgcggacatt gaggtggacg 360 gcaagcaggt ggagctggct ctgtgggaca cagcagggca ggaagactat gatcgactgc 420 ggcctctctc ctacccggac actgatgtca tcctcatgtg cttctccatc gacagccctg 480 acagcctgga aaacattcct gagaagtgga ccccagaggt gaagcacttc tgccccaacg 540 tgcccatcat cctggtgggg aataagaagg acctgaggca agacgagcac accaggagag 600 agctggccaa gatgaagcag gagcccgttc ggtctgagga aggccgggac atggcgaacc 660 ggatcagtgc ctttggctac cttgagtgct cagccaagac caaggaggga gtgcgggagg 720 tgtttgagat ggccactcgg gctggcctcc aggtccgcaa gaacaagcgt cggaggggct 780 gtcccattct ctgagatccc caaggccttt cctacatgcc ccctcccttc acaggggtac 840 agaaattatc cccctacaac cccagcctcc tgagggctcc atgctgaagg ctcccatttt 900 cagttccctc ctgcccagga ctgcattgtt ttctagcccc gaggtggtgg cacgggccct 960 ccctcccagc gctctgggag ccacgcctat gccctgccct tcctcagggc ccctggggat 1020 cttgccccct ttgaccttcc ccaaaggatg gtcacacacc agcactttat acacttctgg 1080 ctcacaggaa agtgtctgca gtaggggacc cagagtccca ggcccctgga gttgttttcg 1140 gcaggggcct tgtctctcac tgcatttggt caggggggca tgaataaagg ctacaggc 1198 10 2223 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 2634931CB1 10 cggccacccg tccgaccaca ccagggcaac tgtagtgcca gtgcctggtt ccacccgggg 60 ggcatctgag aactgtgtcc ttccattcct gagtccagca cttcccaggc caggaactca 120 cacagctttt ggcctgagcc cccgttacca agagaaagga ggtttttgcc aaggactcca 180 aggggagtgc acttgatgct ggtcgggacc caaagcaccc agccctccct gagacattgt 240 gtgagtcggg ctgggcctca aacacggccc ccactgcccc accccagcca gggtggtgct 300 tgtgtgggta ggactttaaa tccagctgcc agacccctgg acgggagaag gagagacggc 360 tggccaccat gcacggctcc tgcagtttcc tgatgcttct gctgccgcta ctgctactgc 420 tggtggccac cacaggcccc gttggagccc tcacagatga ggagaaacgt ttgatggtgg 480 agctgcacaa cctctaccgg gcccaggtat ccccgacggc ctcagacatg ctgcacatga 540 gatgggacga ggagctggcc gccttcgcca aggcctacgc acggcagtgc gtgtggggcc 600 acaacaagga gcgcgggcgc cgcggcgaga atctgttcgc catcacagac gagggcatgg 660 acgtgccgct ggccatggag gagtggcacc acgagcgtga gcactacaac ctcagcgccg 720 ccacctgcag cccaggccag atgtgcggcc actacacgca ggtggtatgg gccaagacag 780 agaggatcgg ctgtggttcc cacttctgtg agaagctcca gggtgttgag gagaccaaca 840 tcgaattact ggtgtgcaac tatgagcctc cggggaacgt gaaggggaaa cggccctacc 900 aggaggggac tccgtgctcc caatgtccct ctggctacca ctgcaagaac tccctctgtg 960 aacccatcgg aagcccggaa gatgctcagg atttgcctta cctggtaact gaggccccat 1020 ccttccgggc gactgaagca tcagactcta ggaaaatggg tactccttct tccctagcaa 1080 cggggattcc ggctttcttg gtaacagagg tctcaggctc cctggcaacc aaggctctgc 1140 ctgctgtgga aacccaggcc ccaacttcct tagcaacgaa agacccgccc tccatggcaa 1200 cagaggctcc accttgcgta acaactgagg tcccttccat tttggcagct cacagcctgc 1260 cctccttgga tgaggagcca gttaccttcc ccaaatcgac ccatgttcct atcccaaaat 1320 cagcagacaa agtgacagac aaaacaaaag tgccctctag gagcccagag aactctctgg 1380 accccaagat gtccctgaca ggggcaaggg agctcctacc ccatgcccag gaggaggctg 1440 aggctgaggc tgagttgcct ccttccagtg aggtcttggc ctcagttttt ccagcccagg 1500 acaagccagg tgagctgcag gccacactgg accacacggg gcacacctcc tccaagtccc 1560 tgcccaattt ccccaatacc tctgccaccg ctaatgccac gggtgggcgt gccctggctc 1620 tgcagtcgtc cttgccaggt gcagagggcc ctgacaagcc tagcgtcgtg tcagggctga 1680 actcgggccc tggtcatgtg tggggccctc tcctgggact actgctcctg cctcctctgg 1740 tgttggctgg aatcttctga aggggatacc actcaaaggg tgaagaggtc agctgtcctc 1800 ctgtcatctt ccccaccctg tccccagccc ctaaacaaga tacttcttgg ttaaggccct 1860 ccggaaggga aaggctacgg ggcatgtgcc tcatcacacc atccatcctg gaggcacaag 1920 gcctggctgg ctgcgagctc agggggccgc ctgaggactg cacaccgggc ccacacctct 1980 cctgcccctc cctcctgagt cctgggggtg ggaggatttg agggagctca ctgcctacct 2040 ggcctggggc tgtctgccca cacagcatgt gcgctctccc tgagtgcctg tgtagctggg 2100 gatggggatt cctaggggca gatgaaggac aagccccact ggagtggggt tctttgagtg 2160 ggggaggcag ggacgaggga aggaaagcaa ctcctgactc tccaataaaa acctgtccaa 2220 cct 2223 11 3427 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 1440138CB1 11 gggtggaaac tgcctggagc cgtttctcgc gccgctgttg gtcgtgccgc tgcctcctcc 60 tcctccgccg ccgccgccgc cgccgccgcc gccctctccg gctcttcgct cggcccctct 120 ccgcctccat gtgccggata gcgggagcgc tgcggaccct gctgccgctg ctggcggccc 180 tgcttcaggc gtctgtagag gcttctggtg aaatcgcatt atgcaagact ggatttcctg 240 aagatgttta cagtgcagtc ttatcgaagg atgtgcatga aggacagcct cttctcaatg 300 tgaagtttag caactgcaat ggaaaaagaa aagtacaata tgagagcagt gagcctgcag 360 attttaaggt ggatgaagat ggcatggtgt atgccgtgag aagctttcca ctctcttctg 420 agcatgccaa gttcctgata tatgcccaag acaaagagac ccaggaaaag tggcaagtgg 480 cagtaaaatt gagcctgaag ccaaccttaa ctgaggagtc agtgaaggag tcagcagaag 540 ttgaagaaat agtgttccca agacaattca gtaagcacag tggccaccta caaaggcaga 600 agagagactg ggtcatccct ccaatcaact tgccagaaaa ctccagggga ccttttcctc 660 aagagcttgt caggatcagg tctgatagag ataaaaacct ttcactgcgg tacagtgtaa 720 ctgggccagg agctgaccag cctccaactg gtatcttcat tatcaacccc atctcgggtc 780 agctgtcggt gacaaagccc ctggatcgcg agcagatagc ccggtttcat ttgagggcac 840 atgcagtaga tattaatgga aatcaagtgg agaaccccat tgacattgtc atcaatgtta 900 ttgacatgaa tgacaacaga cctgagttct tacaccaggt ttggaatggg acagttcctg 960 agggatcaaa gcctggaaca tatgtgatga ccgtaacagc aattgatgct gacgatccca 1020 atgccctcaa tgggatgttg aggtacagaa tcgtgtctca ggctccaagc accccttcac 1080 ccaacatgtt tacaatcaac aatgagactg gtgacatcat cacagtggca gctggacttg 1140 atcgagaaaa agtgcaacag tatacgttaa taattcaagc tacagacatg gaaggcaatc 1200 ccacatatgg cctttcaaac acagccacgg ccgtcatcac agtgacagat gtcaatgaca 1260 atcctccaga gtttactgcc atgacgtttt atggtgaagt tcctgagaac agggtagaca 1320 tcatagtagc taatctaact gtgaccgata aggatcaacc ccatacacca gcctggaacg 1380 cagtgtacag aatcagtggc ggagatccta ctggacggtt cgccatccag accgacccaa 1440 acagcaacga cgggttagtc accgtggtca aaccaatcga ctttgaaaca aataggatgt 1500 ttgtccttac tgttgctgca gaaaatcaag tgccattagc caagggaatt cagcacccgc 1560 ctcagtcaac tgcaaccgtg tctgttacag ttattgacgt aaatgaaaac ccttattttg 1620 cccccaatcc taagatcatt cgccaagaag aagggcttca tgccggtacc atgttgacaa 1680 cattcactgc tcaggaccca gatcgatata tgcagcaaaa tattagatac actaaattat 1740 ctgatcctgc caattggcta aaaatagatc ctgtgaatgg acaaataact acaattgctg 1800 ttttggaccg agaatcacca aatgtgaaaa acaatatata taatgctact ttccttgctt 1860 ctgacaatgg aattcctcct atgagtggaa caggaacgct gcagatctat ttacttgata 1920 ttaatgacaa tgcccctcaa gtgttacctc aagaggcaga gacttgcgaa actccagacc 1980 ccaattcaat taatattaca gcacttgatt atgacattga tccaaatgct ggaccatttg 2040 cttttgatct tcctttatct ccagtgacta ttaagagaaa ttggaccatc actcggctta 2100 atggtgattt tgctcagctt aatttaaaga taaaatttct tgaagctggt atctatgaag 2160 ttcccatcat aatcacagat tcgggtaatc ctcccaaatc aaatatttcc atcctgcgcg 2220 tgaaggtttg ccagtgtgac tccaacgggg actgcacaga tgtggacagg attgtgggtg 2280 cggggcttgg caccggtgcc atcattgcca tcctgctctg catcatcatc ctgcttatcc 2340 ttgtgctgat gtttgtggta tggatgaaac gccgggataa agaacgccag gccaaacaac 2400 ttttaattga tccagaagat gatgtaagag ataatatttt aaaatatgat gaagaaggtg 2460 gaggagaaga agaccaggac tatgacttga gccagctgca gcagcctgac actgtggagc 2520 ctgatgccat caagcctgtg ggaatccgac gaatggatga aagacccatc cacgccgagc 2580 cccagtatcc ggtccgatct gcagccccac accctggaga cattggggac ttcattaatg 2640 agggccttaa agcggctgac aatgacccca cagctccacc atatgactcc ctgttagtgt 2700 ttgactatga aggcagtggc tccactgctg ggtccttgag ctcccttaat tcctcaagta 2760 gtggtggtga gcaggactat gattacctga acgactgggg gccacggttc aagaaacttg 2820 ctgacatgta tggtggaggt gatgactgaa cttcagggtg aacttggttt ttggacaagt 2880 acaaacaatt tcaactgata ttcccaaaaa gcattcagaa gctaggcttt aactttgtag 2940 tctactagca cagtgcttgc tggaggcttt ggcataggct gcaaaccaat ttgggctcag 3000 agggaatatc agtgatccat actgtttgga aaaacactga gctcagttac acttgaattt 3060 tacagtacag aagcactggg attttatgtg cctttttgta cctttttcag attggaatta 3120 gttttctgtt taaggcttta atggtactga tttctgaaac gataagtaaa agacaaaata 3180 ttttgtggtg ggagcagtaa gttaaaccat gatatgcttc aacacgcttt tgttacattg 3240 catttgcttt tattaaaata caaaattaaa caaacaaaaa aactcatgga gcgattttat 3300 tatcttgggg gatgagacca tgagattgga aaatgtacat tacttctagt tttagacttt 3360 agtgtgtttt ttttttttca ctagaatctt aaaacttact cagctggttg caataaaggg 3420 gttttcc 3427 12 837 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 411388CB1 12 gcctgtggtt tccgcacccg ctgccacccc cgcccctagc gtggacattt atcctctagc 60 gctcaggccc tgccgccatc gccgcagatc cagcgcccag agagacacca gagaacccac 120 catggccccc tttgagcccc tggcttctgg catcctgttg ttgctgtggc tgatagcccc 180 cagcagggcc tgcacctgtg tcccacccca cccacagacg gccttctgca attccgacct 240 cgtcatcagg gccaagttcg tggggacacc agaagtcaac cagaccacct tataccagcg 300 ttatgagatc aagatgacca agatgtataa agggttccaa gccttagggg atgccgctga 360 catccggttc gtctacaccc ccgccatgga gagtgtctgc ggatacttcc acaggtccca 420 caaccgcagc gaggagtttc tcattgctgg aaaactgcag gatggactct tgcacatcac 480 tacctgcagt ttcgtggctc cctggaacag cctgagctta gctcagcgcc ggggcttcac 540 caagacctac actgttggct gtgaggaatg cacagtgttt ccctgtttat ccatcccctg 600 caaactgcag agtggcactc attgcttgtg gacggaccag ctcctccaag gctctgaaaa 660 gggcttccag tcccgtcacc ttgcctgcct gcctcgggag ccagggctgt gcacctggca 720 gtccctgcgg tcccagatag cctgaatcct gcccggagtg gaagctgaag cctgcacagt 780 gtccaccctg ttcccactcc catctttctt ccggacaatg aaataaagag ttaccac 837 13 2298 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 2543010CB1 13 tgcagagaag cagttgtttt gctggaagga gggagtgcgc gggctgcccc gggctcctcc 60 ctgccgcctc ctctcagtgg atggttccag gcaccctgtc tggggcaggg agggcacagg 120 cctgcacatc gaaggtgggg tgggaccagg ctgcccctcg ccccagcatc caagtcctcc 180 cttgggcgcc cttggccctg cagactctca gggctaaggt cctctgttgc tttttggttc 240 caccttagaa gaggctccgc ttgactaaga gtagcttgaa ggaggcacca tgcaggagct 300 gcatctgctc tggtgggcgc ttctcctggg cctggctcag gcctgccctg agccctgcga 360 ctgtggggaa aagtatggct tccagatcgc cgactgtgcc taccgcgacc tagaatccgt 420 gccgcctggc ttcccggcca atgtgactac actgagcctg tcagccaacc ggctgccagg 480 cttgccggag ggtgccttca gggaggtgcc cctgctgcag tcgctgtggc tggcacacaa 540 tgagatccgc acggtggccg ccggagccct ggcctctctg agccatctca agagcctgga 600 cctcagccac aatctcatct ctgactttgc ctggagcgac ctgcacaacc tcagtgccct 660 ccaattgctc aagatggaca gcaacgagct gaccttcatc ccccgcgacg ccttccgcag 720 cctccgtgct ctgcgctcgc tgcaactcaa ccacaaccgc ttgcacacat tggccgaggg 780 caccttcacc ccgctcaccg cgctgtccca cctgcagatc aacgagaacc ccttcgactg 840 cacctgcggc atcgtgtggc tcaagacatg ggccctgacc acggccgtgt ccatcccgga 900 gcaggacaac atcgcctgca cctcacccca tgtgctcaag ggtacgccgc tgagccgcct 960 gccgccactg ccatgctcgg cgccctcagt gcagctcagc taccaaccca gccaggatgg 1020 tgccgagctg cggcctggtt ttgtgctggc actgcactgt gatgtggacg ggcagccggc 1080 ccctcagctt cactggcaca tccagatacc cagtggcatt gtggagatca ccagccccaa 1140 cgtgggcact gatgggcgtg ccctgcctgg cacccctgtg gccagctccc agccgcgctt 1200 ccaggccttt gccaatggca gcctgcttat ccccgacttt ggcaagctgg aggaaggcac 1260 ctacagctgc ctggccacca atgagctggg cagtgctgag agctcagtgg acgtggcact 1320 ggccacgccc ggtgagggtg gtgaggacac actggggcgc aggttccatg gcaaagcggt 1380 tgagggaaag ggctgctata cggttgacaa cgaggtgcag ccatcagggc cggaggacaa 1440 tgtggtcatc atctacctca gccgtgctgg gaaccctgag gctgcagtcg cagaaggggt 1500 ccctgggcag ctgcccccag gcctgctcct gctgggccaa agcctcctcc tcttcttctt 1560 cctcacctcc ttctagcccc acccagggct tccctaactc ctccccttgc ccctaccaat 1620 gcccctttaa gtgctgcagg ggtctggggt tggcaactcc tgaggcctgc atgggtgact 1680 tcacattttc ctacctctcc ttctaatctc ttctagagca cctgctatcc ccaacttcta 1740 gacctgctcc aaactagtga ctaggataga atttgatccc ctaactcact gtctgcggtg 1800 ctcattgctg ctaacagcat tgcctgtgct ctcctctcag gggcagcatg ctaacggggc 1860 gacgtcctaa tccaactggg agaagcctca gtggtggaat tccaggcact gtgactgtca 1920 agctggcaag ggccaggatt gggggaatgg agctggggct tagctgggag gtggtctgaa 1980 gcagacaggg aatgggagag gaggatggga agtagacagt ggctggtatg gctctgaggc 2040 tccctggggc ctgctcaagc tcctcctgct ccttgctgtt ttctgatgat ttgggggctt 2100 gggagtccct ttgtcctcat ctgagactga aatgtgggga tccaggatgg ccttccttcc 2160 tcttaccctt cctccctcag cctgcaacct ctatcctgga acctgtcctc cctttctccc 2220 caactatgca tctgttgtct gctcctctgc aaaggccagc cagcttggga gcagcagaga 2280 aataaacagc atttctga 2298 14 2449 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 100164CB1 14 cggctcgagg gcgagcagtg ccaatctaca gcgaagaaag tctcgtttgg taaaagcgag 60 aagggaaagc ctgagcatgc agagtgtgca gagcacgagc ttttgtctcc gaaagcagtg 120 cctttgcctg accttcctgc ttctccatct cctgggacag gtcgctgcga ctcagcgctg 180 ccctccccag tgcccgggcc ggtgccctgc gacgccgccg acctgcgccc ccggggtgcg 240 cgcggtgctg gacggctgct catgctgtct ggtgtgtgcc cgccagcgtg gcgagagctg 300 ctcagatctg gagccatgcg acgagagcag tggcctctac tgtgatcgca gcgcggaccc 360 cagcaaccag actggcatct gcacggcggt agagggagat aactgtgtgt tcgatggggt 420 catctaccgc agtggagaga aatttcagcc aagctgcaaa ttccagtgca cctgcagaga 480 tgggcagatt ggctgtgtgc cccgctgtca gctggatgtg ctactgcctg agcctaactg 540 cccagctcca agaaaagttg aggtgcctgg agagtgctgt gaaaagtgga tctgtggccc 600 agatgaggag gattcactgg gaggccttac ccttgcagct tacaggccag aagccaccct 660 aggagtagaa gtctctgact caagtgtcaa ctgcattgaa cagaccacag agtggacagc 720 atgctccaag agctgtggta tggggttctc cacccgggtc accaatagga accgtcaatg 780 tgagatgctg aaacagactc ggctctgcat ggtgcggccc tgtgaacaag agccagagca 840 gccaacagat aagaaaggaa aaaagtgtct ccgcaccaag aagtcactca aagccatcca 900 cctgcagttc aagaactgca ccagcctgca cacctacaag cccaggttct gtggggtctg 960 cagtgatggc cgctgctgca ctccccacaa taccaaaacc atccaggcag agtttcagtg 1020 ctccccaggg caaatagtca agaagccagt gatggtcatt gggacctgca cctgtcacac 1080 caactgtcct aagaacaatg aggccttcct ccaggagctg gagctgaaga ctaccagagg 1140 gaaaatgtaa cctgtcactc aagaagcaca cctacagagc acctgtagct gctgcgccac 1200 ccaccatcaa aggaatataa gaaaagtaat gaagaatcac gatttcatcc ttgaatccta 1260 tgtattttcc taatgtgatc atatgaggac ctttatatct gtcttttatt taacaaaaaa 1320 tgtaattaac tgtaaacttg gaatcaaggt aagctcagga tatggcttag gaatgactta 1380 ctttcctgtg gttttattac aaatgcaaat ttctataaat ttaagaaaac aagtatataa 1440 tttactttgt agactgtttc acattgcact catcatattt tgttgtgcac tagtgcaatt 1500 ccaagaaaat atcactgtaa tgagtcagtg aagtctagaa tcatacttaa catttcattg 1560 tacaagtatt acaaccatat attgaggttt attgggaaga ttctctattg gctccctttt 1620 tgggtaaacc agctctgaac ttccaagctc caaatccaag gaaacatgca gctcttcaac 1680 atgacatcca gagatgacta ttacttttct gtttagtttt acactaggaa acgtgttgta 1740 tctacagtaa tgaaatgttt actaagtgga ctggtgtcat aaactttctc catttaagac 1800 acattgactc ctttccaata gaaagaaact aaacagaaaa ctcccaatac aaagatgact 1860 ggtccctcat agccctcaga catttatata ttggaagctg ctgaggcccc caagtttttt 1920 aattaagcag aaacagcata ttagcaggga ttctctcatc taactgatga gtaaactgag 1980 gcccaaagca cttgcttaca tcctctgata gctgtttcaa atgtgcattt tgtggaattt 2040 tgagaaaaat agagcaaaat caacatgact ggtggtgaga gaccacacat tttatgagag 2100 tttggaatta ttgtagacat gcccaaaact tatccttggg ccataattat gaaaactcat 2160 gatcaagata tatgtgtata catacatgta tctggtttgt caggctacaa ggtaggctgc 2220 aaaattaaat ctagacattc ttttaatgcc accacacgtg ttccgcttct ctcttttaaa 2280 gtatttataa aaatataaat tgtacatttt gtaaaatatt atgtttgatt tctctacttg 2340 tcatatcact aaataaacac gattttattg ctgcgtgact ctgtattact ttggtgcata 2400 aaagttgaac attgttgttt actgaaaata aaattaaaat ttatgaatt 2449 15 5760 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 899248.6 15 cggggctcag gcagtaacag agaagaattt tgaaacaaaa gattttcgag cctctctaga 60 aaatggtgtt ctgctgtgtg atttgattaa taagcttaaa cctggcgtca ttaagaagat 120 caatagactg tctacaccaa tagcaggatt ggataatata aacgttttct tgaaagcttg 180 tgaacagatt ggattgaaag aagcccagct tttccatcct ggagatctac aggatttatc 240 aaatcgagtc actgtcaagc aagaagagac tgacaggaga gtgaaaaatg ttttgataac 300 attgtactgg ctgggaagaa aagcacaaag caacccgtac tataatggtc cccatcttaa 360 tttgaaagcg tttgagaatc ttttaggaca agcactgacg aaggcactcg aagactccag 420 cttcctgaaa agaagtggca gggacagtgg ctacggtgac atctggtgtc ctgaacgtgg 480 agaatttctt gctcctccaa ggcaccataa gagagaagat tcctttgaaa gcttggactc 540 tttgggctcg aggtcattga caagctgctc ctctgatatc acgttgagag gggggcgtga 600 aggttttgaa agtgacacag attcggaatt tacattcaag atgcaggatt ataataaaga 660 tgatatgtcg tatcgaagga tttcggctgt tgagccaaag actgcgttac ccttcaatcg 720 ttttttaccc aacaaaagta gacagccatc ctatgtacca gcacctctga gaaagaaaaa 780 gccagacaaa catgaggata acagaagaag ttgggcaagc ccggtttata cagaagcaga 840 tggaacattt tcaagactct ttcaaaagat ttatggtgag aatgggagta agtccatgag 900 tgatgtcagc gcagaagatg ttcaaaactt gcgtcagctg cgttacgagg agatgcagaa 960 aataaaatca caattaaaag aacaagatca gaaatggcag gatgaccttg caaaatggaa 1020 agatcgtcga aaaagttaca cttcagatct gcagaagaaa aaagaagaga gagaagacat 1080 tgaaaagcag gcacttgaga agtctaagag aagctctaag acgtttaagg aaatgctgca 1140 ggacagggaa tcccaaaatc aaaagtctac agttccgtca agaaggagaa tgtattcttt 1200 tgatgatgtg ctggaggaag gaaagcgacc ccctacaatg actgtgtcag aagcaagtta 1260 ccagagtgag agagtagaag agaagggagc aacttatcct tcagaaattc ccaaagaaga 1320 ttctaccact tttgcaaaaa gagaggaccg tgtaacaact gaaattcagc ttccttctca 1380 aagtcctgtg gaagaacaaa gcccagcctc tttgtcttct ctgcgttcac ggagcacaca 1440 aatggaatca actcgtgttt cagcttctct ccccagaagt taccggaaaa ctgatacagt 1500 caggttaaca tctgtggtca caccaagacc ctttggctct cagacaaggg gaatctcatc 1560 actccccaga tcttacacga tggatgatgc ttggaagtat aatggagatg ttgaagacat 1620 taagagaact ccaaacaatg tggtcagcac ccctgcacca agcccggacg caagccaact 1680 ggcttcaagc ttatctagcc agaaagaggt agcagcaaca gaagaagatg tgacaaggct 1740 gccctctcct acatccccct tctcatctct ttcccaagac caggctgcca cttctaaagc 1800 cacattgtct tccacatctg gtcttgattt aatgtctgaa tctggagaag gggaaatctc 1860 cccacaaaga gaagtctcaa gatcccagga tcagttcagt gatatgagaa tcagcataaa 1920 ccagacgcct gggaagagtc ttgactttgg gtttacaata aaatgggata ttcctgggat 1980 cttcgtagca tcagttgaag caggtagccc agcagaattt tctcagctac aagtagatga 2040 tgaaattatt gctattaaca acaccaagtt ttcatataac gattcaaaag agtgggagga 2100 agccatggct aaggctcaag aaactggaca cctagtgatg gatgtgaggc gctatggaaa 2160 ggctggttca cctgaaacaa agtggattga tgcaacttct ggaatttaca actcagaaaa 2220 atcttcaaat ctatctgtaa caactgattt ctccgaaagc cttcagagtt ctaatattga 2280 atccaaagaa atcaatggaa ttcatgatga aagcaatgct tttgaatcaa aagcatctga 2340 atccatttct ttgaaaaact taaaaaggcg atcacaattt tttgaacaag gaagctctga 2400 ttcggtggtt cctgatcttc cagttccaac catcagtgcc ccgagtcgct gggtgtggga 2460 tcaagaggag gagcggaagc ggcaggagag gtggcagaag gagcaggacc gcctactgca 2520 ggaaaaatat caacgtgagc aggagaaact gagggaagag tggcaaaggg ccaaacagga 2580 ggcagagaga gagaattcca agtacttgga tgaggaactg atggtcctaa gctcaaacag 2640 catgtctctg accacacggg agccctctct tgccacctgg gaagctacct ggagtgaagg 2700 gtccaagtct tcagacagag aaggaacccg agcaggagaa gaggagagga gacagccaca 2760 agaggaagtt gttcatgagg accaaggaaa gaagccgcag gatcagcttg ttattgagag 2820 agagaggaaa tgggagcaac agcttcagga agagcaagag caaaagcggc ttcaggctga 2880 ggctgaggag cagaagcgtc ctgcggagga gcagaagcgc caggcagaga tagagcggga 2940 aacatcagtc agaatatacc agtacaggag gcctgttgat tcctatgata taccaaagac 3000 agaagaagca tcttcaggtt ttcttcctgg tgacaggaat aaatccagat ctactactga 3060 actggatgat tactccacaa ataaaaatgg aaacaataaa tatttagacc aaattgggaa 3120 cacgacctct tcacagagga gatccaagaa agaacaagta ccatcaggag cagaattgga 3180 gaggcaacaa atccttcagg aaatgaggaa gagaacaccc cttcacaatg acaacagctg 3240 gatccgacag cgcagtgcca gtgtcaacaa agagcctgtt agtcttcctg ggatcatgag 3300 aagaggcgaa tctttagata acctggactc cccccgatcc aattcttgga gacagcctcc 3360 ttggctcaat cagcccacag gattctatgc ttcttcctct gtgcaagact ttagtcgccc 3420 accacctcag ctggtgtcca catcaaaccg tgcctacatg cggaacccct cctccagcgt 3480 gcccccacct tcagctggct ccgtgaagac ctccaccaca ggtgtggcca ccacacagtc 3540 ccccaccccg agaagccatt ccccttcagc ttcacagtca ggctctcagc tgcgtaacag 3600 gtcagtcagt gggaagcgca tatgctccta ctgcaataac attctgggca aaggagccgc 3660 catgatcatc gagtccctgg gtctttgtta tcatttgcat tgttttaagt gtgttgcctg 3720 tgagtgtgac ctcggaggct cttcctcagg agctgaagtc aggatcagaa accaccaact 3780 gtactgcaac gactgctatc tcagattcaa atctggacgg ccaaccgcca tgtgatgtaa 3840 gcctccatac gaaagcactg ttgcagatag aagaagaggt ggttgctgct catgtagatc 3900 tataaatatg tgttgtatgt cttttttgct ttttttttaa aaaaaagaat aacttttttt 3960 gcctctttag attacataga agcattgtag tcttggtaga accagtattt ttgttgttta 4020 tttataaggt aattgtgtgt ggggaaaagt gcagtattta cctgttgaat tcagcatctt 4080 gagagcacaa gggaaaaaat aagaacctac gaatattttt gaggcagata atgatctagt 4140 ttgactttct agttagtggt gttttgaaga gggtatttta ttgtttttta aaaaaaggtt 4200 cttaaacatt atttgaaata gttaatataa atacataatt gcatttgctc tgtttattgt 4260 aatgtattct aaattaatgc agaaccatat ggaaaatttc attaaaatct atccccaaat 4320 gtgctttctg tatccttcct tctacctatt attctgattt ttaaaaatgc agttaatgta 4380 ccatttattt gcttgatgaa gggagctcta ttttctttac cagaaatgtt gctaagtaat 4440 tcccaataga aagctgctta ttttcattaa tgaaaaataa ccatggtttg tatactagaa 4500 gtcttcttca gaaactggtg agcctttctg ttcaattgca tttgtaaata aacttgctga 4560 tgcatttaac gagtgggtcg tctttttctt aggtgtatgt gtctgacctc aggcctttta 4620 gccatatttc agtatgtggc cttttttgat gttatgtttt atccagtagc tttactaagg 4680 tataatnnnn nnnnnnnnnn nnnnnnnnnn nnnnnnnnnn nnnnnnnnnn nnnngacatg 4740 gtgtatacct tcgaaactat gccacagtct ggatgtgttt actgaaacat tttaataagg 4800 aagtttattt ttgataaagt tatgtttttg gatacaatat atttgtatgg tgagagtgat 4860 gaattgttgg atcatttgaa taaaatcttt tactaacccc atgataaaag gagaagacaa 4920 cagtgagctt agaatatcta taaagcaaaa aatgtagtct cttgtttaaa aaatctggag 4980 cgggaatgca aggatacaaa actttagcat gctttgagca aaaatttaaa cttactggaa 5040 tcttttataa taatgtaagt ggaatggagg attctaggaa ctgagaactg tattggaata 5100 ggttcaaaat atgtaagaaa tgctaatgtg ggagataaaa attttattta gtacttattc 5160 tgattattat taaagtaata atgtgttcct tgaggataac ttgtcaaatg ccccaaagca 5220 taaagaatat aattctgaat cccaaattcc aaagacaaga actctgtgtt tgaattcatt 5280 ctgcatataa ttatttataa gtatagattg tgaatttttc catgttctta aaattatttt 5340 tatctttttt catggttgca tagtgctcca ttgtttggcc ttggtaatat ttagttgata 5400 attccattac tgtgtatttt tcacttgttt ctaagatcaa acattttaat atgtgcatgt 5460 tatatataaa tatgtaaatt ctgtgatact ctatgatcat ctctttcttt atattatttt 5520 catagacatg aaatagttgc tcagagatta tgcattttaa gacactcata gtatatattg 5580 ccaaagtggt ttccagaaag gcactgctgg cttcgactcc tataagcagc acgtgggctt 5640 gttcatctca ctgcatgttt atgaagatac agttcttttg ccttgttctc tgcctgatgt 5700 gtatgcagag gcagccctca atatgcagtg gttgaataaa tgaatgaaga aaccactatc 5760 16 2782 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 1519595CB1 16 cgcccgcttg cccgtcggtc gctagctcgc tcggtgcgcg tcgtcccgct ccatggcgct 60 cttcgtgcgg ctgctggctc tcgccctggc tctggccctg ggccccgccg cgaccctggc 120 gggtcccgcc aagtcgccct accagctggt gctgcagcac agcaggctcc ggggccgcca 180 gcacggcccc aacgtgtgtg ctgtgcagaa ggttattggc actaatagga agtacttcac 240 caactgcaag cagtggtacc aaaggaaaat ctgtggcaaa tcaacagtca tcagctacga 300 gtgctgtcct ggatatgaaa aggtccctgg ggagaagggc tgtccagcag ccctaccact 360 ctcaaacctt tacgagaccc tgggagtcgt tggatccacc accactcagc tgtacacgga 420 ccgcacggag aagctgaggc ctgagatgga ggggcccggc agcttcacca tcttcgcccc 480 tagcaacgag gcctgggcct ccttgccagc tgaagtgctg gactccctgg tcagcaatgt 540 caacattgag ctgctcaatg ccctccgcta ccatatggtg ggcaggcgag tcctgactga 600 tgagctgaaa cacggcatga ccctcacctc tatgtaccag aattccaaca tccagatcca 660 ccactatcct aatgggattg taactgtgaa ctgtgcccgg ctgctgaaag ccgaccacca 720 tgcaaccaac ggggtggtgc acctcatcga taaggtcatc tccaccatca ccaacaacat 780 ccagcagatc attgagatcg aggacacctt tgagaccctt cgggctgctg tggctgcatc 840 agggctcaac acgatgcttg aaggtaacgg ccagtacacg cttttggccc cgaccaatga 900 ggccttcgag aagatcccta gtgagacttt gaaccgtatc ctgggcgacc cagaagccct 960 gagagacctg ctgaacaacc acatcttgaa gtcagctatg tgtgctgaag ccatcgttgc 1020 ggggctgtct gtagagaccc tggagggcac gacactggag gtgggctgca gcggggacat 1080 gctcactatc aacgggaagg cgatcatctc caataaagac atcctagcca ccaacggggt 1140 gatccactac attgatgagc tactcatccc agactcagcc aagacactat ttgaattggc 1200 tgcagagtct gatgtgtcca cagccattga ccttttcaga caagccggcc tcggcaatca 1260 tctctctgga agtgagcggt tgaccctcct ggctcccctg aattctgtat tcaaagatgg 1320 aacccctcca attgatgccc atacaaggaa tttgcttcgg aaccacataa ttaaagacca 1380 gctggcctct aagtatctgt accatggaca gaccctggaa actctgggcg gcaaaaaact 1440 gagagttttt gtttatcgta atagcctctg cattgagaac agctgcatcg cggcccacga 1500 caagaggggg aggtacggga ccctgttcac gatggaccgg gtgctgaccc ccccaatggg 1560 gactgtcatg gatgtcctga agggagacaa tcgctttagc atgctggtag ctgccatcca 1620 gtctgcagga ctgacggaga ccctcaaccg ggaaggagtc tacacagtct ttgctcccac 1680 aaatgaagcc ttccgagccc tgccaccaag agaacggagc agactcttgg gagatgccaa 1740 ggaacttgcc aacatcctga aataccacat tggtgatgaa atcctggtta gcggaggcat 1800 cggggccctg gtgcggctaa agtctctcca aggtgacaag ctggaagtca gcttgaaaaa 1860 caatgtggtg agtgtcaaca aggagcctgt tgccgagcct gacatcatgg ccacaaatgg 1920 cgtggtccat gtcatcacca atgttctgca gcctccagcc aacagacctc aggaaagagg 1980 ggatgaactt gcagactctg cgcttgagat cttcaaacaa gcatcagcgt tttccagggc 2040 ttcccagagg tctgtgcgac tagcccctgt ctatcaaaag ttattagaga ggatgaagca 2100 ttagcttgaa gcactacagg aggaatgcac cacggcagct ctccgccaat ttctctcaga 2160 tttccacaga gactgtttga atgttttcaa aaccaagtat cacactttaa tgtacatggg 2220 ccgcaccata atgagatgtg agccttgtgc atgtggggga ggagggagag agatgtactt 2280 tttaaatcat gttcccccta aacatggctg ttaacccact gcatgcagaa acttggatgt 2340 cactgcctga cattcacttc cagagaggac ctatcccaaa tgtggaattg actgcctatg 2400 ccaagtccct ggaaaaggag cttcagtatt gtggggctca taaaacatga atcaagcaat 2460 ccagcctcat gggaagtcct ggcacagttt ttgtaaagcc cttgcacagc tggagaaatg 2520 gcatcattat aagctatgag ttgaaatgtt ctgtcaaatg tgtctcacat ctacacgtgg 2580 cttggaggct tttatggggc cctgtccagg tagaaaagaa atggtatgta gagcttagat 2640 gtccctattg tgacagagcc atggtgtgtt tgtaataata aaaccaaaga aacataaaag 2700 cctccaagca acgtgtagat gtgagacaca tttgacagaa catctcaact catagcttat 2760 aatgatgcca tttctccagc tg 2782 17 1897 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 063646CB1 17 gaggagcatt gcccgtcaga cagcaactca gagaataacc agagaacaac cagattgaaa 60 caatggagga tctttgtgtg gcaaacacac tctttgccct caatttattc aagcatctgg 120 caaaagcaag ccccacccag aacctcttcc tctccccatg gagcatctcg tccaccatgg 180 ccatggtcta catgggctcc aggggcagca ccgaagacca gatggccaag gtgcttcagt 240 ttaatgaagt gggagccaat gcagttaccc ccatgactcc agagaacttt accagctgtg 300 ggttcatgca gcagatccag aagggtagtt atcctgatgc gattttgcag gcacaagctg 360 cagataaaat ccattcatcc ttccgctctc tcagctctgc aatcaatgca tccacaggga 420 attatttact ggaaagtgtc aataagctgt ttggtgagaa gtctgcgagc ttccgggaag 480 aatatattcg actctgtcag aaatattact cctcagaacc ccaggcagta gacttcctag 540 aatgtgcaga agaagctaga aaaaagatta attcctgggt caagactcaa accaaaggca 600 aaatcccaaa cttgttacct gaaggttctg tagatgggga taccaggatg gtcctggtga 660 atgctgtcta cttcaaagga aagtggaaaa ctccatttga gaagaaacta aatgggcttt 720 atcctttccg tgtaaactcg gctcagcgca cacctgtaca gatgatgtac ttgcgtgaaa 780 agctaaacat tggatacata gaagacctaa aggctcagat tctagaactc ccatatgctg 840 gagatgttag catgttcttg ttgcttccag atgaaattgc cgatgtgtcc actggcttgg 900 agctgctgga aagtgaaata acctatgaca aactcaacaa gtggaccagc aaagacaaaa 960 tggctgaaga tgaagttgag gtatacatac cccagttcaa attagaagag cattatgaac 1020 tcagatccat tctgaaaagc atgggcatgg aggacgcctt caacaaggga cgggccaatt 1080 tctcagggat gtcggagagg aatgacctgt ttctttctga agtgttccac caagccatgg 1140 tggatgtgaa tgaggagggc actgaagcag ccgctggcac aggaggtgtt atgacaggga 1200 gaactggaca tggaggccca cagtttgtgg cagatcatcc gtttcttttt cttattatgc 1260 ataagataac caagtgcatt ttatttttcg gcagattttg ctcaccctaa aactaagcgt 1320 gctgcttctg caaaagattt ttgtagatga gctgtgtgcc tcagaattgc tatttcaaat 1380 tgccaaaaat ttagagatgt tttctacata tttctgctct tctgaacaac ttctgctacc 1440 cactaaataa aaacacagaa ataattagac aattgtctat tataacatga caaccctatt 1500 aatcatttgg tcttctaaaa tgggatcatg cccatttaga ttttccttac tatcagttta 1560 tttttataac attaactttt actttgttat ttattatttt atataatggt gagtttttaa 1620 attattgctc actgcctatt taatgtagct aataaagtta tagaagcaga tgatctgtta 1680 atttcctatc taataaatgc ctttaattgt tctcataatg aagaataagt aggtatccct 1740 ccatgccctt ctgtaataaa tatctggaaa aaacattaaa caataggcaa atatatgtta 1800 tgtgcatttc tagaaataca taacacatat atatgtctgt atcttatatt caattgcaag 1860 tatataataa ataaacctgc ttccaaacaa caaaaaa 1897 18 1974 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 1301477CB1 18 agcaatcaca gcagtgccga cgtcgtgggt gtttggtgtg aggctgcgag ccgccgcgag 60 ttctcacggt cccgccggcg ccaccaccgc ggtcactcac cgccgccgcc gccaccactg 120 ccaccacggt cgcctgccac aggtgtctgc aattgaactc caaggtgcag aatggtttgg 180 aaagtagctg tattcctcag tgtggccctg ggcattggtg ccgttcctat agatgatcct 240 gaagatggag gcaagcactg ggtggtgatc gtggcaggtt caaatggctg gtataattat 300 aggcaccagg cagacgcgtg ccatgcctac cagatcattc accacaatgg gattcctgac 360 gaacagatcg ttgtgatgat gtacgatgac attgcttact ctgaagacaa tcccactcca 420 ggaattgtga tcaacaggcc caatggcaca gatgtctatc agggagtccc gaaggactac 480 actggagagg atgttacccc acaaaatttc cttgctgtgt tgagaggcga tgcagaagca 540 gtgaagggca taggatccgg caaagtcctg aagagtggcc cccaggatca cgtgttcatt 600 tacttcactg accatggatc tactggaata ctggtttttc ccaatgaaga tcttcatgta 660 aaggacctga atgagaccat ccattacatg tacaaacaca aaatgtaccg aaagatggtg 720 ttctacattg aagcctgtga gtctgggtcc atgatgaacc acctgccgga taacatcaat 780 gtttatgcaa ctactgctgc caaccccaga gagtcgtcct acgcctgtta ctatgatgag 840 aagaggtcca cgtacctggg ggactggtac agcgtcaact ggatggaaga ctcggacgtg 900 gaagatctga ctaaagagac cctgcacaag cagtaccacc tggtaaaatc gcacaccaac 960 accagccacg tcatgcagta tggaaacaaa acaatctcca ccatgaaagt gatgcagttt 1020 cagggtatga aacgcaaagc cagttctccc gtccccctac ctccagtcac acaccttgac 1080 ctcaccccca gccctgatgt gcctctcacc atcatgaaaa ggaaactgat gaacaccaat 1140 gatctggagg agtccaggca gctcacggag gagatccagc ggcatctgga tgccaggcac 1200 ctcattgaga agtcagtgcg taagatcgtc tccttgctgg cagcgtccga ggctgaggtg 1260 gagcagctcc tgtccgagag agccccgctc acggggcaca gctgctaccc agaggccctg 1320 ctgcacttcc ggacccactg cttcaactgg cactccccca cgtacgagta tgcgttgaga 1380 catttgtacg tgctggtcaa cctttgtgag aagccgtatc cgcttcacag gataaaattg 1440 tccatggacc acgtgtgcct tggtcactac tgaagagctg cctcctggaa gcttttccaa 1500 gtgtgagcgc cccaccgact gtgtgctgat cagagactgg agaggtggag tgagaagtct 1560 ccgctgctcg ggccctcctg gggagccccc gctccagggc tcgctccagg accttcttca 1620 caagatgact tgctcgctgt tacctgcttc cccagtcttt tctgaaaaac tacaaattag 1680 ggtgggaaaa gctctgtatt gagaagggtc atatttgctt tctaggaggt ttgttgtttt 1740 gcctgttagt tttgaggagc aggaagctca tgggggcttc tgtagcccct ctcaaaagga 1800 gtctttattc tgagaatttg aagctgaaac ctctttaaat cttcagaatg attttattga 1860 agagggccgc aagccccaaa tggaaaactg tttttagaaa atatgatgat ttttgattgc 1920 ttttgtattt aattctgcag gtgttcaagt cttaaaaaat aaagatttat aaca 1974 19 3261 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 269059.26 19 ggggacacac aacaactctt ccccgctgag aggagacagc cagtgcgact ccaccctcca 60 gctcgacggc agccgccccg gccgacagcc ccgagacgac agcccggcgc gtcccggtcc 120 ccacctccga ccaccgccag cgctccaggc cccgccgctc cccgctcgcc gccaccgcgc 180 cctccgctcc gcccgcagtg ccaaccatga ccgccgccag tatgggcccc gtccgcgtcg 240 ccttcgtggt cctcctcgcc ctctgcagcc ggccggccgt cggccagaac tgcagcgggc 300 cgtgccggtg cccggacgag ccggcgccgc gctgcccggc gggcgtgagc ctcgtgctgg 360 acggctgcgg ctgctgccgc gtctgcgcca agcagctggg cgagctgtgc accgagcgcg 420 acccctgcga cccgcacaag ggcctcttct gtgacttcgg ctccccggcc aaccgcaaga 480 tcggcgtgtg caccgccaaa gatggtgctc cctgcatctt cggtggtacg gtgtaccgca 540 gcggagagtc cttccagagc agctgcaagt accagtgcac gtgcctggac ggggcggtgg 600 gctgcatgcc cctgtgcagc atggacgttc gtctgcccag ccctgactgc cccttcccga 660 ggagggtcaa gctgcccggg aaatgctgcg aggagtgggt gtgtgacgag cccaaggacc 720 aaaccgtggt tgggcctgcc ctcgcggctt accgactgga agacacgttt ggcccagacc 780 caactatgat tagagccaac tgcctggtcc agaccacaga gtggagcgcc tgttccaaga 840 cctgtgggat gggcatctcc acccgggtta ccaatgacaa cgcctcctgc aggctagaga 900 agcagagccg cctgtgcatg gtcaggcctt gcgaagctga cctggaagag aacattaaga 960 agggcaaaaa gtgcatccgt actcccaaaa tctccaagcc tatcaagttt gagctttctg 1020 gctgcaccag catgaagaca taccgagcta aattctgtgg agtatgtacc gacggccgat 1080 gctgcacccc ccacagaacc accaccctgc cggtggagtt caagtgccct gacggcgagg 1140 tcatgaagaa gaacatgatg ttcatcaaga cctgtgcctg ccattacaac tgtcccggag 1200 acaatgacat ctttgaatcg ctgtactaca ggaagatgta cggagacatg gcatgaagcc 1260 agagagtgag agacattaac tcattagact ggaacttgaa ctgattcaca tctcattttt 1320 ccgtaaaaat gatttcagta gcacaagtta tttaaatctg tttttctaac tgggggaaaa 1380 gattcccacc caattcaaaa cattgtgcca tgtcaaacaa atagtctatc aaccccagac 1440 actggtttga agaatgttaa gacttgacag tggaactaca ttagtacaca gcaccagaat 1500 gtatattaag gtgtggcttt aggagcagtg ggagggtacc agcagaaagg ttagtatcat 1560 cagatagcat cttatacgag taatatgcct gctatttgaa gtgtaattga gaaggaaaat 1620 tttagcgtgc tcactgacct gcctgtagcc ccagtgacag ctaggatgtg cattctccag 1680 ccatcaagag actgagtcaa gttgttcctt aagtcagaac agcagactca gctctgacat 1740 tctgattcga atgacactgt tcaggaatcg gaatcctgtc gattagactg gacagcttgt 1800 ggcaagtgaa tttgcctgta acaagccaga ttttttaaaa tttatattgt aaatattgtg 1860 tgtgtgtgtg tgtgtgtata tatatatata tgtacagtta tctaagttaa tttaaagttg 1920 tttgtgcctt tttatttttg tttttaatgc tttgatattt caatgttagc ctcaatttct 1980 gaacaccata ggtagaatgt aaagcttgtc tgatcgttca aagcatgaaa tggatactta 2040 tatggaaatt ctgctcagat agaatgacag tccgtcaaaa cagattgttt gcaaagggga 2100 ggcatcagtg tccttggcag gctgatttct aggtaggaaa tgtggtagcc tcacttttaa 2160 tgaacaaatg gcctttatta aaaactgagt gactctatat agctgatcag ttttttcacc 2220 tggaagcatt tgtttctact ttgatatgac tgtttttcgg acagtttatt tgttgagagt 2280 gtgaccaaaa gttacatgtt tgcacctttc tagttgaaaa taaagtgtat attttttctc 2340 tcatttctcc cagaattaaa gatatacttt agtgatctgc gtgataatat ttataggttt 2400 atttacctat atttaaaaat gatcagtggc tagacatgtc tagaaatata tatggcctaa 2460 tatgtaactt ctctttgata aagtgaaaac aagtaatata taagctaata ttattgaagc 2520 aatatttttt ggtacatact tacttatttt attgttttcg atctgcatgc acaatatgaa 2580 atcataaaag caacaaacat caccacacca acactgagta agatcatttc tatcaggcca 2640 aggaggttta tttttccagt tacttgactt ctgaacatgt ttgccttctc atcaccaatg 2700 gtcccagtct gtaatcaagt taataatcaa cattatttgg gtacgttagt aaaacaaaat 2760 aaacccttca attgcctatc accctttttt ctaacacctc tattggtgtt agtcatcagt 2820 atctataagg caagttaatg gaattccttt tgcaagtcaa gaaaggcaat taagtgccag 2880 atagagtacg gtactcttca atgtactagg attcatttgc tcttcagaac tatcaaaggg 2940 tcaacagttt catttgctcc aaagacttat tcaatgtttt tcctattttt atagctatca 3000 atgcatggat ttatagtaaa aataccttgt caggcaatag aagacaaatg ttacaacaag 3060 aaaatgtgtt taatagatgc atttttgaag aaaatcttaa atgataggaa atgtttttgt 3120 tcaattggat catctcaaat aggttaaata aatgtatact catccatatg ggtaatggaa 3180 atacatatag ctttaaatac tatacattct tttgaaacat caagagcttg tttatataca 3240 aagaaggttg tttttaatga c 3261 20 1395 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 5425777CA2 20 cccagacaca agtcttcact ccttcctgcg agccctgagg aagccttctt tccccagaca 60 tggccaacaa gggtccttcc tatggcatga gccgcgaagt gcagtccaaa atcgagaaga 120 agtatgacga ggagctggag gagcggctgg tggagtggat catagtgcag tgtggccctg 180 atgtgggccg cccagaccgt gggcgcttgg gcttccaggt ctggctgaag aatggcgtga 240 ttctgagcaa gctggtgaac agcctgtacc ctgatggctc caagccggtg aaggtgcccg 300 agaacccacc ctccatggtc ttcaagcaga tggagcaggt ggctcagttc ctgaaggcgg 360 ctgaggacta tggggtcatc aagactgaca tgttccagac tgttgacctc tttgaaggca 420 aagacatggc agcagtgcag aggaccctga tggctttggg cagcttggca gtgaccaaga 480 atgatgggca ctaccgtgga gatcccaact ggtttatgaa gaaagcgcag gagcataaga 540 gggaattcac agagagccag ctgcaggagg gaaagcatgt cattggcctt cagatgggca 600 gcaacagagg ggcctcccag gccggcatga caggctacgg acgacctcgg cagatcatca 660 gttagagcgg agagggctag ccctgagccc ggccctcccc cagctccttg gctgcagcca 720 tcccgcttag cctgcctcac ccacacccgt gtggtacctt cagccctggc caagctttga 780 ggctctgtca ctgagcaatg gtaactgcac ctgggcagct cctccctgtg cccccagcct 840 cagcccaact tcttacccga aagcatcact gccttgggcc cctccctccc ggctgccccc 900 atcacctcta ctgtctcctc cctgggctaa gcaggggaga agcgggctgg gggtagcctg 960 gatgtgggcc aagtccactg tcctccttgg cggcaaaagc ccattgaaga agaaccagcc 1020 cagcctgccc cctatcttgt cctggaatat ttttggggtt ggaactcaaa aaaaaaaaag 1080 ggggggcccg cgcgtttatt gtgccttctt cagaccccgg gaattaattc ccgaccggat 1140 accttggcag ctatattgaa tcttgcaacc gtttaactta ccattttttg cctcagcccg 1200 gtgtttctgg cttgtttggg aagccggttg gtcctctttg gtgttccgtt ccacgcgaaa 1260 aggtttagac agacttccgg aacacttccg ggttccccag acaccagctt ctttgttagg 1320 gtccccaccg gtcattgtcg cccggatcgc ttggtccacc ggcgcggtta acgttttttc 1380 agccgggcga tgtca 1395 21 3971 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 2019981CB1 21 tggggtttgt gaagtcgtgg cccgttagca ggaagcctaa cagtcgcccc gacgctagtg 60 agggacccaa tctgagtccc cggccagccg aatccaagcc gtgtgtactg cgtgctcagc 120 actgcccgac agtcctagct aaacttcgcc aactccgctg cctttgccgc caccatgccc 180 aaaacgatca gtgtgcgtgt gaccaccatg gatgcagagc tggagtttgc catccagccc 240 aacaccaccg ggaagcagct atttgaccag gtggtgaaaa ctattggctt gagggaagtt 300 tggttctttg gtctgcagta ccaggacact aaaggtttct ccacctggct gaaactcaat 360 aagaaggtga ctgcccagga tgtgcggaag gaaagccccc tgctctttaa gttccgtgcc 420 aagttctacc ctgaggatgt gtccgaggaa ttgattcagg acatcactca gcgcctgttc 480 tttctgcaag tgaaagaggg cattctcaat gatgatattt actgcccgcc tgagaccgct 540 gtgctgctgg cctcgtatgc tgtccagtct aagtatggcg acttcaataa ggaagtgcat 600 aagtctggct acctggccgg agacaagttg ctcccgcaga gagtcctgga acagcacaaa 660 ctcaacaagg accagtggga ggagcggatc caggtgtggc atgaggaaca ccgtggcatg 720 ctcagggagg atgctgtcct ggaatatctg aagattgctc aagatctgga gatgtatggt 780 gtgaactact tcagcatcaa gaacaagaaa ggctcagagc tgtggctggg ggtggatgcc 840 ctgggtctca acatctatga gcagaatgac agactaactc ccaagatagg cttcccctgg 900 agtgaaatca ggaacatctc tttcaatgat aagaaatttg tcatcaagcc cattgacaaa 960 aaagccccgg acttcgtctt ctatgctccc cggctgcgga ttaacaagcg gatcttggcc 1020 ttgtgcatgg ggaaccatga actatacatg cgccgtcgca agcctgatac cattgaggtg 1080 cagcagatga aggcacaggc ccgggaggag aagcaccaga agcagatgga gcgtgctatg 1140 ctggaaaatg agaagaagaa gcgtgaaatg gcagagaagg agaaagagaa gattgaacgg 1200 gagaaggagg agctgatgga gaggctgaag cagatcgagg aacagactaa gaaggctcag 1260 caagaactgg aagaacagac ccgtagggct ctggaacttg agcaggaacg gaagcgtgcc 1320 cagagcgagg ctgaaaagct ggccaaggag cgtcaagaag ctgaagaggc caaggaggcc 1380 ttgctgcagg cctcccggga ccagaaaaag actcaggaac agctggcctt ggaaatggca 1440 gagctgacag ctcgaatctc ccagctggag atggcccgac agaagaagga gagtgaggct 1500 gtggagtggc agcagaaggc ccagatggta caggaagact tggagaagac ccgtgctgag 1560 ctgaagactg ccatgagtac acctcatgtg gcagagcctg ctgagaatga gcaggatgag 1620 caggatgaga atggggcaga ggctagtgct gacctacggg ctgatgctat ggccaaggac 1680 cgcagtgagg aggaacgtac cactgaggca gagaagaatg agcgtgtgca gaagcacctg 1740 aaggccctca cttcggagct ggccaatgcc agagatgagt ccaagaagac tgccaatgac 1800 atgatccatg ctgagaacat gcgactgggc cgagacaaat acaagaccct gcgccagatc 1860 cggcagggca acaccaagca gcgcattgac gaatttgagt ctatgtaatg ggcacccagc 1920 ctctagggac ccctcctccc tttttccttg tccccacact cctacaccta actcacctaa 1980 ctcatactgt gctggagcca ctaactagag cagccctgga gtcatgccaa gcatttaatg 2040 tagccatggg accaaaccta gccccttagc ccccacccac ttccctgggc aaatgaatgg 2100 ctcactatgg tgccaatgga acctcctttc tcttctctgt tccattgaat ctgtatggct 2160 agaatatcct acttctccag cctagaggta ctttccactt gattttgcaa atgcccttac 2220 acttactgtt gtcctatggg agtcaagtgt ggagtaggtt ggaagctagc tcccctcctc 2280 tcccctacca ctgtcttctt cagggtcctg agatttacac ggttggagtg ttatgcggtc 2340 tagggaatga gacaggacct aggatatctt ctccaggatg tcaactgacc taaaatttgc 2400 cctcccatcc cgtttagagt tatttaggct ttgtaacgat tgggggataa aaagatgttc 2460 agtcattttt gtttctacct cccagatcgg atctgttgca aactcagcct caataagcct 2520 tgtcgttgac tttagggact caatttctcc ccagggtgga tgggggaaat ggtgccttca 2580 agaccttcac caaacatact agaagggcat tggccattct attgtggcaa ggctgagtag 2640 aagatcctac cccaattcct tgtaggagta taggccggtc taaagtgagc tctatgggca 2700 gatctacccc ttacttatta ttccagatct gcagtcactt cgtgggatct gcccctccct 2760 gcttcaatac ccaaatcctc tccagctata acagtaggga tgagtaccca aaagctcagc 2820 cagccccatc aggactcttg tgaaaagaga ggatatgttc acacctagcg tcagtatttt 2880 ccctgctagg ggttttaggt ctcttcccct ctgcagagct acttggggcc atagctcctg 2940 ctccacagcc atcccagcct tggcatctag agcttgatgc cagtaggctc aactagggag 3000 tgagtgcaaa aagctgagta tggtgagaga agcctgtgcc ctgatccaag tttactcaac 3060 cctctcaggt gaccaaaatc cccttctcat cactcccctc caaagaggtg actgggccct 3120 gcctctgttt gacaaacctc taacccaggt cttgacacca gctgttctgt cccttgggag 3180 ctgtaaacca gagagctgct ggggattctg gcctagtccc ttccacaccc ccaccccttg 3240 ctctcaaccc aggagcatcc aacctccttt ctctggtctc atgtgtgctc ttcttctttc 3300 tacagtatta tgtactctac tgatatctaa atattgattt ctgccttcct tgctaatgca 3360 ccattagaag atattagtct tggggcagga tgattttggc ctcattactt taccaccccc 3420 acacctggaa agcatatact atattacaaa atgacatttt gccaaaatta ttaatataag 3480 aagctttcag tattagtgat gtcatctgtc actataggtc atacaatcca ttcttaaagt 3540 acttgttatt tgtttttatt attactgttt gtcttctccc cagggttcag tcctcaaggg 3600 gccatcctgt cccaccatgc agtgccccct agcttagagc ctccctcaat tccccctggc 3660 caccaccccc cactctgtgc ctgaccttga ggagtcttgt gtgcattgct gtgaattagc 3720 tcacttggtg atatgtccta tattggctaa attgaaacct ggaattgtgg ggcaatctat 3780 taatagctgc cttaaagtca gtaacttacc cttagggagg ctgggggaaa aggttagatt 3840 ttgtattcag gggttttttg tgtacttttt gggtttttta aaaattgttt ttggaggggt 3900 ttatgctcaa tccatgttct atttcagtgc caataaaatt taggaagact tcaaaaaaaa 3960 aaaaaaaaaa a 3971 22 3229 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 1250434CB1 22 acaggaggat caccctcttc gtcgcttcgg ccagtgtgtc gggctgggcc ctgacaagcc 60 acctgaggag aggctcggag ccgggcccgg accccggcga ttgccgcccg cttctctcta 120 gtctcacgag gggtttcccg cctcgcaccc ccacctctgg acttgccttt ccttctcttc 180 tccgcgtgtg gagggagcca gcgcttaggc cggagcgagc ctgggggccg cccgccgtga 240 agacatcgcg gggaccgatt caccatggag ggcgccggcg gcgcgaacga caagaaaaat 300 aggataagtt ctgaacgtcg aaaagaaaag tctcgagatg cagccagatc tcggcgaagt 360 aaagaatctg aagtttttta tgagcttgct catcagttgc cacttccaca taatgtgagt 420 tcgcatcttg ataaggcctc tgtgatgagg cttaccatca gctatttgcg tgtgaggaaa 480 cttctggatg ctggtgattt ggatattgaa gatgacatga aagcacagat gaattgcttt 540 tatttgaaag ccttggatgg ttttgttatg gttctcacag atgatggtga catgatttac 600 atttctgata atgtgaacaa atacatggga ttaactcagt ttgaactaac tggacacagt 660 gtgtttgatt ttactcatcc atgtgaccat gaggaaatga gagaaatgct tacacacaga 720 aatggccttg tgaaaaaggg taaagaacaa aacacacagc gaagcttttt tctcagaatg 780 aagtgtaccc taactagccg aggaagaact atgaacataa agtctgcaac atggaaggta 840 ttgcactgca caggccacat tcacgtatat gataccaaca gtaaccaacc tcagtgtggg 900 tataagaaac cacctatgac ctgcttggtg ctgatttgtg aacccattcc tcacccatca 960 aatattgaaa ttcctttaga tagcaagact ttcctcagtc gacacagcct ggatatgaaa 1020 ttttcttatt gtgatgaaag aattaccgaa ttgatgggat atgagccaga agaactttta 1080 ggccgctcaa tttatgaata ttatcatgct ttggactctg atcatctgac caaaactcat 1140 catgatatgt ttactaaagg acaagtcacc acaggacagt acaggatgct tgccaaaaga 1200 ggtggatatg tctgggttga aactcaagca actgtcatat ataacaccaa gaattctcaa 1260 ccacagtgca ttgtatgtgt gaattacgtt gtgagtggta ttattcagca cgacttgatt 1320 ttctcccttc aacaaacaga atgtgtcctt aaaccggttg aatcttcaga tatgaaaatg 1380 actcagctat tcaccaaagt tgaatcagaa gatacaagta gcctctttga caaacttaag 1440 aaggaacctg atgctttaac tttgctggcc ccagccgctg gagacacaat catatcttta 1500 gattttggca gcaacgacac agaaactgat gaccagcaac ttgaggaagt accattatat 1560 aatgatgtaa tgctcccctc acccaacgaa aaattacaga atataaattt ggcaatgtct 1620 ccattaccca ccgctgaaac gccaaagcca cttcgaagta gtgctgaccc tgcactcaat 1680 caagaagttg cattaaaatt agaaccaaat ccagagtcac tggaactttc ttttaccatg 1740 ccccagattc aggatcagac acctagtcct tccgatggaa gcactagaca aagttcacct 1800 gagcctaata gtcccagtga atattgtttt tatgtggata gtgatatggt caatgaattc 1860 aagttggaat tggtagaaaa actttttgct gaagacacag aagcaaagaa cccattttct 1920 actcaggaca cagatttaga cttggagatg ttagctccct atatcccaat ggatgatgac 1980 ttccagttac gttccttcga tcagttgtca ccattagaaa gcagttccgc aagccctgaa 2040 agcgcaagtc ctcaaagcac agttacagta ttccagcaga ctcaaataca agaacctact 2100 gctaatgcca ccactaccac tgccaccact gatgaattaa aaacagtgac aaaagaccgt 2160 atggaagaca ttaaaatatt gattgcatct ccatctccta cccacataca taaagaaact 2220 actagtgcca catcatcacc atatagagat actcaaagtc ggacagcctc accaaacaga 2280 gcaggaaaag gagtcataga acagacagaa aaatctcatc caagaagccc taacgtgtta 2340 tctgtcgctt tgagtcaaag aactacagtt cctgaggaag aactaaatcc aaagatacta 2400 gctttgcaga atgctcagag aaagcgaaaa atggaacatg atggttcact ttttcaagca 2460 gtaggaattg gaacattatt acagcagcca gacgatcatg cagctactac atcactttct 2520 tggaaacgtg taaaaggatg caaatctagt gaacagaatg gaatggagca aaagacaatt 2580 attttaatac cctctgattt agcatgtaga ctgctggggc aatcaatgga tgaaagtgga 2640 ttaccacagc tgaccagtta tgattgtgaa gttaatgctc ctatacaagg cagcagaaac 2700 ctactgcagg gtgaagaatt actcagagct ttggatcaag ttaactgagc tttttcttaa 2760 tttcattcct ttttttggac actggtggct cactacctaa agcagtctat ttatattttc 2820 tacatctaat tttagaagcc tggctacaat actgcacaaa cttggttagt tcaatttttg 2880 atcccctttc tacttaattt acattaatgc tcttttttag tatgttcttt aatgctggat 2940 cacagacagc tcattttctc agttttttgg tatttaaacc attgcattgc agtagcatca 3000 ttttaaaaaa tgcacctttt tatttattta tttttggcta gggagtttat ccctttttcg 3060 aattattttt aagaagatgc caatataatt tttgtaagaa ggcagtaacc tttcatcatg 3120 atcataggca gttgaaaaat tgttaccacc gtgttttcac attgtacata ttataatggc 3180 ttgccggcgt acgtggtagc cccatttgcc cattttttgt cttgaagga 3229 23 2887 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 1383585.7 23 agacagcatc cccacctgtc ccagcaggcc tgacctgagg agcatcgtgg aggagattga 60 ggacctttgt tgctcgcctg gatgaaactc gggggcgtgt atctccagtt tgaagaagga 120 ctggaaacaa cagcgttatt tgtggctgcc acctacaagc tcatggatca tgtggggact 180 gagccatcca ttaaggagga tcaggtcatc cagctgatga acgcgatctt cagcaagaag 240 aactttgagt ccctctccga agccttcagc gcagccgagc cggccatggc gttgtcgatg 300 ccgctgaatg ggctgaagga ggaggacaaa gagcccctca tcgagctctt cgtcaaggct 360 ggcagtgatg gtgaaagcat aggaaactgc cccttttccc agaggctctt catgattctt 420 tggctcaaag gagttgtatt tagtgtgacg actgttgacc tgaaaaggaa gccagcagac 480 ctgcagaact tggctcccgg gacccaccca ccatttataa ctttcaacag tgaagtcaaa 540 acggatgtaa ataagattga ggaatttctt gaagaagtct tatgccctcc caagtactta 600 aagctttcac caaaacaccc agaatcaaat actgctggaa tggacatctt tgccaaattc 660 tctgcatata tcaagaattc aaggccagag gctaatgaag cactggagag gggtctcctg 720 aaaaccctgc agaaactgga tgaatatctg aattctcctc tccctgatga aattgatgaa 780 aatagtatgg aggacataaa gttttctaca cgtaaatttc tggatggcaa tgaaatgaca 840 ttagctgatt gcaacctgct gcccaaactg catattgtca aggtggtggc caaaaaatat 900 cgcaactttg atattccaaa agaaatgact ggcatctgga gatacctaac taatgcatac 960 agtagggacg agttcaccaa tacctgtccc agtgataagg aggttgaaat agcatatagt 1020 gatgtagcca aaagactcac caagtaaaat cgcgtttgta aaagagatgt cttcatgtct 1080 tcccctaaga atacgctttt cctaacaggc tactccttcc tgtagagcag aaattgtatt 1140 ttgcacgaac atgcagttat tgaagattag gatcaaggat agacaaggta tagtagttat 1200 cttaaaatat acactcctaa gcagtattat tttaaaatcc tttaccctgg ctacctcccc 1260 tacccgggtt cccctctctt taatttggag acactccacc acaaactttt cactttagag 1320 gtagcttgcc atctctcagg agccctcacc attgtgtcca ttcactgtgt atagatggca 1380 gaacttttga ggtgcaatgt ttaattgtta aaaatagtag ccacgacttt atcaggcagc 1440 cccaaactgg tgcataatgc atggtacaag aaatatttat gtattttttg gaattttgta 1500 atatttagta agagtatatg aaaggattgc tactgtatca gaaatattgt ttcaatttag 1560 tctatcctgg atatgtacta acgaatatta ccaccagaga agagagcttt ctacaaaagt 1620 cactacagat tttgctatat tgctttgtag atagattttt acttttgcct aaaagcattt 1680 atccttcata ccaattgtaa catctgacac catgtagaag ctaaaagttt agagggagtg 1740 agcgttttct caagaccttc ctcaagcatt ttatctttag aagagaaact gatgggcacc 1800 tgatactctg tctaaatacg tttgttatat gtgttttgcc ctgtgccatt catttggaac 1860 tttattgcat tctttatttt aaaaagcttg tttttacgta atcatagagc ttgctatttg 1920 tacatctgtt gagcaacact acataactga tttttagttg acttagctat agcagtacaa 1980 tgattagtaa tgtaaaaatt aacacagaaa ttaacctaag gaatgaaggg tgggtttgtc 2040 aaaatatcaa gtaaattttt gtttctaaag tacatttaat gtagatgacc taaagaatgc 2100 gttatccatc ctatataaaa gaaagataaa acacaggtca ccaattttct catttcaccc 2160 catttacctg tatagaggat gttcattcct tgggactaag ttatagttat ggtgagtgtg 2220 tatttactgt agtttgcctg atctcactca ttgcacttcc tggagttaaa ttttccaaca 2280 gccatgttga ggaatagcac tctgcatgtt ttgtttgttt ttcggggttt tttttaattg 2340 aagccctaaa ccaggaatta tttgtgttct aacaggagga tgaacttgct gaaaataaaa 2400 cttgctatgt atttactctt ttttaaaaga caaaagcaaa accagacttt ctacgtacta 2460 ctccaaagac tgtgatgtga ctataataca tttttggtaa tttttttata cctaatttgt 2520 ataggaagtg ctatttctca taggctgttt cttgaaattt taagtttatt gctttaaaat 2580 ggcagtgttt ctcccacttt gatatgctaa catttagtaa gcactggctt tatgaaagcg 2640 gctttttata agtatactgc attttttgag cctatcatta attagcttag tattttcttt 2700 ataatttctt gaacaggcaa atgaaagctt attatagaat gcatgtattt tcttttatct 2760 ttggaacatc agcaccagta tattgctggc cagctattgt attaaaaaat aaaagtatat 2820 tttcactatc ataaaggatt cttttttccc ccctcatgaa aataaacaac aacttggggt 2880 aaaaaaa 2887 24 3299 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 2456481CB1 24 gcggagcagc ccgaggcggg gcagcctccc ggagcagcgc cgcgcagagc ccgggacaat 60 ggggccgcgg cggctgctgc tggtggccgc ctgcttcagt ctgtgcggcc cgctgttgtc 120 tgcccgcacc cgggcccgca ggccagaatc aaaagcaaca aatgccacct tagatccccg 180 gtcatttctt ctcaggaacc ccaatgataa atatgaacca ttttgggagg atgaggagaa 240 aaatgaaagt gggttaactg aatacagatt agtctccatc aataaaagca gtcctcttca 300 aaaacaactt cctgcattca tctcagaaga tgcctccgga tatttgacca gctcctggct 360 gacactcttt gtcccatctg tgtacaccgg agtgtttgta gtcagcctcc cactaaacat 420 catggccatc gttgtgttca tcctgaaaat gaaggtcaag aagccggcgg tggtgtacat 480 gctgcacctg gccacggcag atgtgctgtt tgtgtctgtg ctccccttta agatcagcta 540 ttacttttcc ggcagtgatt ggcagtttgg gtctgaattg tgtcgcttcg tcactgcagc 600 attttactgt aacatgtacg cctctatctt gctcatgaca gtcataagca ttgaccggtt 660 tctggctgtg gtgtatccca tgcagtccct ctcctggcgt actctgggaa gggcttcctt 720 cacttgtctg gccatctggg ctttggccat cgcaggggta gtgcctctcg tcctcaagga 780 gcaaaccatc caggtgcccg ggctcaacat cactacctgt catgatgtgc tcaatgaaac 840 cctgctcgaa ggctactatc cctactactt ctcagccttc tctgctgtct tcttttttgt 900 gccgctgatc atttccacgg tctgttatgt gtctatcatt cgatgtctta gctcttccgc 960 agttgccaac cgcagcaaga agtcccgggc tttgttcctg tcagctgctg ttttctgcat 1020 cttcatcatt tgcttcggac ccacaaacgt cctcctgatt gcgcattact cattcctttc 1080 tcacacttcc accacagagg ctgcctactt tgcctacctc ctctgtgtct gtgtcagcag 1140 cataagctcg tgcatcgacc ccctaattta ctattacgct tcctctgagt gccagaggta 1200 cgtctacagt atcttatgct gcaaagaaag ttccgatccc agcagttata acagcagtgg 1260 gcagttgatg gcaagtaaaa tggatacctg ctctagtaac ctgaataaca gcatatacaa 1320 aaagctgtta acttaggaaa agggactgct gggaggttaa aaagaaaagt ttataaaagt 1380 gaataacctg aggattctat tagtccccac ccaaacttta ttgattcacc tcctaaaaca 1440 acagatgtac gacttgcata cctgcttttt atgggagctg tcaagcatgt atttttgtca 1500 attaccagaa agataacagg acgagatgac ggtgttattc caagggaata ttgccaatgc 1560 tacagtaata aatgaatgtc acttctggat atagctaggt gacatataca tacttacatg 1620 tgtgtatatg tagatgtatg cacacacata tattatttgc agtgcagtat agaataggca 1680 ctttaaaaca ctctttcccc gcaccccagc aattatgaaa ataatctctg attccctgat 1740 ttaatatgca aagtctaggt tggtagagtt tagccctgaa catttcatgg tgttcatcaa 1800 cagtgagaga ctccatagtt tgggcttgta ccacttttgc aaataagtgt attttgaaat 1860 tgtttgacgg caaggtttaa gttattaaga ggtaagactt agtactatct gtgcgtagaa 1920 gttctagtgt tttcaatttt aaacatatcc aagtttgaat tcctaaaatt atggaaacag 1980 atgaaaagcc tctgttttga tatgggtagt attttttaca ttttacacac tgtacacata 2040 agccaaaact gagcataagt cctctagtga atgtaggctg gctttcagag taggctattc 2100 ctgagagctg catgtgtccg cccccgatgg aggactccag gcagcagaca catgccaggg 2160 ccatgtcaga cacagattgg ccagaaacct tcctgctgag cctcacagca gtgagactgg 2220 ggccactaca tttgctccat cctcctggga ttggctgtga actgatcatg tttatgagaa 2280 actggcaaag cagaatgtga tatcctagga ggtaatgacc atgaaagact tctctaccca 2340 tcttaaaaac aacgaaagaa ggcatggact tctggatgcc catccactgg gtgtaaacac 2400 atctagtagt tgttctgaaa tgtcagttct gatatggaag cacccattat gcgctgtggc 2460 cactccaata ggtgctgagt gtacagagtg gaataagaca gagacctgcc ctcaagagca 2520 aagtagatca tgcatagagt gtgatgtatg tgtaataaat atgtttcaca caaacaaggc 2580 ctgtcagcta aagaagtttg aacatttggg ttactatttc ttgtggttat aacttaatga 2640 aaacaatgca gtacaggaca tatatttttt aaaataagtc tgatttaatt gggcactatt 2700 tatttacaaa tgttttgctc aatagattgc tcaaatcagg ttttctttta agaatcaatc 2760 atgtcagtct gcttagaaat aacagaagaa aatagaattg acattgaaat ctaggaaaat 2820 tattctataa tttccattta cttaagactt aatgagactt taaaagcatt ttttaacctc 2880 ctaagtatca agtatagaaa atcttcatgg aattcacaaa gtaatttgga aattaggttg 2940 aaacatatct cttatcttac gaaaaaatgg tagcatttta aacaaaatag aaagttgcaa 3000 ggcaaatgtt tatttaaaag agcaggccag gcgcggtggc tcacgcctgt aatcccagca 3060 ctttgggagg ctgaggcggg tggatcacga ggtcaggaga tcgagaccat cctggctaac 3120 acggtgaaac ccgtctctac taaaaatgca aaaaaaatta gccgggcgtg gtggcaggca 3180 cctgtagtcc cagctactcg ggaggctgag gcaggagact ggcgtgaacc caggaggcgg 3240 accttgtagt gagccgagat cgcgccactg tgctccagac tggcaacaga gcaagacta 3299 25 2115 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 809809CB1 25 gaccgtggga ggttgttgtg gctccgaggg ctgttcgagg agctgctgct gctgaggcgg 60 cggcaactgc attgaggtgg tggcggcgct gccggccccg ggccgctcgg cctctcggct 120 cgccttccag cctcgcctga gcccgccggg gcccgcgccg gccagcgcct gccctatgag 180 tgtgtcactg gttgttatcc gattggagct cgcggaacac tcgcctgtcc ccgccggctt 240 cggcttcagc gccgcggccg gggaaatgtc tgatgaggag ataaaaaaga cgacactagc 300 ctcagctgta gcctgtttag aaggcaagtc accaggagag aaagtagcga ttatccatca 360 gcatctcggc cgtcgagaaa tgacagatgt gatcattgag accatgaagt ccaacccaga 420 tgaactaaaa actacagtgg aagaaaggaa gtcttcagaa gcctccccca ctgcgcaaag 480 aagtaaagat cacagtaagg aatgcataaa cgctgcccca gattctccgt ccaaacagct 540 tccagaccag atttcattct tcagtggaaa tccatcagtt gaaatagttc atggtattat 600 gcacctatat aagacaaata agatgacctc cttaaaagaa gatgtgcggc gcagtgccat 660 gctgtgtatt ctcacagtcc ctgctgcaat gaccagtcat gaccttatga agtttgttgc 720 cccatttaac gaagtaattg aacaaatgaa aattatcaga gactctactc ccaaccaata 780 tatggtgctg ataaagtttc gtgcacaggc tgatgcggat agtttttata tgacatgcaa 840 tggccgccag ttcaactcaa tagaagatga cgtttgccag ctagtgtatg tggaaagagc 900 tgaagtgctc aaatctgaag atggcgccag cctcccagtg atggacctga ctgaactccc 960 caagtgcacg gtgtgtctgg agcgcatgga cgagtctgtg aatggcatcc tcacaacgtt 1020 atgtaaccac agcttccaca gccagtgtct acagcgctgg gacgatacca cgtgtcctgt 1080 ttgccggtac tgtcaaacgc ccgagccagt agaagaaaat aagtgttttg agtgtggtgt 1140 tcaggaaaat ctttggattt gtttaatatg cggccacata ggatgtggac ggtatgtcag 1200 tcgacatgct tataagcact ttgaggaaac gcagcacacg tatgccatgc agcttaccaa 1260 ccatcgagtc tgggactatg ctggagataa ctatgttcat cgactggttg caagtaaaac 1320 agatggaaaa atagtacagt atgaatgtga gggggatact tgccaggaag agaaaataga 1380 tgccttacag ttagagtatt catatttact aacaagccag ctggaatctc agcgaatcta 1440 ctgggaaaac aagatagttc ggatagagaa ggacacagca gaggaaatta acaacatgaa 1500 gaccaagttt aaagaaacaa ttgagaagtg tgataatcta gagcacaaac taaatgatct 1560 cctaaaagaa aagcagtctg tggaaagaaa gtgcactcag ctaaacacaa aagtggccaa 1620 actcaccaac gagctcaaag aggagcagga aatgaacaag tgtttgcgag ccaaccaagt 1680 cctcctgcag aacaagctaa aagaggagga gagggtgctg aaggagacct gtgaccaaaa 1740 agatctgcag atcaccgaga tccaggagca gctgcgtgac gtcatgttct acctggagac 1800 acagcagaag atcaaccatc tgcctgccga gacccggcag gaaatccagg agggacagat 1860 caacatcgcc atggcctcgg cctcgagccc tgcctcttcg gggggcagtg ggaagttgcc 1920 ctccaggaag ggccgcagca agaggggcaa gtgaccttca gagcaacaga catccctgag 1980 actgttctcc ctgacactgt gagagtgtgc tgggaccttc agctaaatgt gagggtgggc 2040 cctaataagt acaagtgagg atcaagccac agttgtttgg ctctttcatt tgctagtgtg 2100 tgatgtagtg aatgt 2115 26 1866 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 227484.13 26 ttttcttgta cacagtgtga actctgactt aaaatgtaaa taagtctatt taacagctct 60 ttattaacag gtattcacag gtattggcat ctcaaatcgc ttttggaaca gttttgttaa 120 aactaatgaa atagtgcctg tctctttcac catctatctt gaatatcaat gagacaatcc 180 gaagcacttc cctgacctca cctagtctct gggctgtggg aggagtaagg aagagctgtc 240 cgtttggatt tgggctgaga gggacagcta ttcttttgcc ggtgcacgtt aactcagctc 300 ctttgggtct gtgttacagg gatcatgtac cgcaagtcct gtgcatcatc agcggcctgt 360 ctcatcgcct ctgccgggta ccagtccttc tgctccccag ggaaactgaa ctcagtttgc 420 atcagctgct gcaacacccc tctttgtaac gggccaaggc ccaagaaaag gggaagttct 480 gcctcggccc tcaggccagg gctccgcacc accatcctgt tcctcaaatt agccctcttc 540 tcggcacact gctgaagctg aaggagatgc caccccctcc tgcattgttc ttccagccct 600 cgcccccaac cccccacctc cctgagtgag tttcttctgg gtgtcctttt attctgggta 660 gggagcggga gtccgtgttc tcttttgttc ctgtgcaaat aatgaaagag ctcggtaaag 720 cattctgaat aaattcagct tgactgaatt ttcagtatgt acttgaagga aggaggtgga 780 gtgaaagttc acccccatgt ctgtgtaacc ggagtcaagg ccaggctggc agagtcagtc 840 cttagaagtc actgaggtgg gcatctgcct tttgtaaagc ctccagtgtc cattccatcc 900 ctgatggggg catagtttga gactgcagag tgagagtgac gttttcttag ggctggaggg 960 ccagttccca ctcaaggctc cctcgcttga cattcaaact tcatgctcct gaaaaccatt 1020 ctctgcagca gaattggctg gtttcgcgcc tgagttgggc tctagtgact cgagactcaa 1080 tgactgggac ttagactggg gctcggcctc gctctgaaaa gtgcttaaga aaatcttctc 1140 agttctcctt gcagaggact ggcgccggga cgcgaagagc aacgggcgct gcacaaagcg 1200 ggcgctgtcg gtggtggagt gcgcatgtac gcgcaggcgc ttctcgtggt tggcgtgctg 1260 cagcgacagg cggcagcaca gcacctgcac gaacacccgc cgaaactgct gcgaggacac 1320 cgtgtacagg agcgggttga tgaccgagct gaggtagaaa aacgtctccg agaaggggag 1380 gaggatcatg tacgcccgga agtaggacct cgtccagtcg tgcttgggtt tggccgcagc 1440 catgatcctc cgaatctggt tgggcatcca gcatacggcc aatgtcacaa caatcagccc 1500 tgggcagaca cgagcaggag ggagagacag agaaaagaaa aacacagcat gagaacacag 1560 taaataaata aaaccataaa atatttagcc cctctgttct gtgcttactg gccaggaaat 1620 ggtaccaatt tttcagtgtt ggacttgaca gcttcttttg ccacaagcaa gagagaattt 1680 aacactgttt caaacccggg ggagttggct gtgttaaaga aagaccatta aatgctttag 1740 acagtgtatt tataccagtt gatgtctgtt aattttaaaa aaatgttttc attggtgttt 1800 gtttgcgtat ccagaaagca gttcatgtta tccataaatc tggttttgtc tttttttgtt 1860 ttaaag 1866 27 2697 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 1712327CB1 27 gcagtcaatc aacagtaaac ttaagagacc cccgatgctc ccctggttta acttgtatgc 60 ttgaaaatta tctgagaggg aataaacatc ttttccttct tccctctcca gaagtccatt 120 ggaatattaa gcccaggagt tgctttgggg atggctggaa gtgcaatgtc ttccaagttc 180 ttcctagtgg ctttggccat atttttctcc ttcgcccagg ttgtaattga agccaattct 240 tggtggtcgc taggtatgaa taaccctgtt cagatgtcag aagtatatat tataggagca 300 cagcctctct gcagccaact ggcaggactt tctcaaggac agaagaaact gtgccacttg 360 tatcaggacc acatgcagta catcggagaa ggcgcgaaga caggcatcaa agaatgccag 420 tatcaattcc gacatcgacg gtggaactgc agcactgtgg acaacgcatc tgtctttggg 480 agagtcatgc agataggcag ccgagagacc gccttcaccc acgcggtgag cgccgcgggc 540 gtggtcaacg ccatcagccg ggcctgccgc gagggcgagc tctccacctg cggctgcagc 600 cggacggcgc ggcccaagga cctgccccgg gactggctct ggggcggctg cggcgacaac 660 atcgactatg gctaccgctt tgccaaggag ttcgtggacg cccgcgagcg ggagcgcatc 720 cacgccaagg gctcctacga gagtgctcgc atcctcatga acctgcacaa caacgaggcc 780 ggccgcagga cggtgtacaa cctggctgat gtggcctgca agtgccatgg ggtgtccggc 840 tcatgtagcc tgaagacatg ctggctgcag ctggcagact tccgcaaggt gggtgatgcc 900 ctgaaggaga agtacgacag cgcggcggcc atgcggctca acagccgggg caagttggta 960 caggtcaaca gccgcttcac ccagcccacc ccggaggacc tggtctatgt ggaccccagc 1020 cccgactact gcctgcgcaa cgagagcacg ggctccctgg gcacgcaggg ccgcctctgc 1080 aacaagacct cggagggcat ggatggctgt gagctcatgt gctgcgggcg tggctacaac 1140 cagttcaaga gcgtgcaggt ggagcgctgc cactgcaagt tccactggtg ctgcttcgtc 1200 aggtgtaaga agtgcacgga gatcgtggac cagtttgtgt gcaagtagtg ggtgccaccc 1260 agcactcagc cccgctccca ggacccgctt atttatagaa agtacagtga ttctggtttt 1320 tggtttttag aaatattttt tatttttccc caagaattgc aaccggaacc attttttttc 1380 ctgttaccat ctaagaactc tgtggtttat tattagtatt ataattatta tttggcaata 1440 atgggggtgg gaaccaagaa aaatatttat tttgtggatc tttgaaaagg taatacaaga 1500 cttcttttga tagtatagaa tgaaggggaa ataacacata ccctaactta gctgtgtgga 1560 catggtacac atccagaagg taaagaaata cattttcttt ttctcaaata tgccatcata 1620 tgggatgggt aggttccagt tgaaagaggg tggtagaaat ctattcacaa ttcagcttct 1680 atgaccaaaa tgagttgtaa attctctggt gcaagataaa aggtcttggg aaaacaaaac 1740 aaaacaaaac aaacctccct tccccagcag ggctgctagc ttgctttctg cattttcaaa 1800 atgataattt acaatggaag gacaagaatg tcatattctc aaggaaaaaa ggtatatcac 1860 atgtctcatt ctcctcaaat attccatttg cagacagacc gtcatattct aatagctcat 1920 gaaatttggg cagcagggag gaaagtcccc agaaattaaa aaatttaaaa ctcttatgtc 1980 aagatgttga tttgaagctg ttataagaat taggattcca gattgtaaaa agatccccaa 2040 atgattctgg acactagatt tttttgtttg gggaggttgg cttgaacata aatgaaaata 2100 tcctgttatt ttcttaggga tacttggtta gtaaattata atagtaaaaa taatacatga 2160 atcccattca caggttctca gcccaagcaa caaggtaatt gcgtgccatt cagcactgca 2220 ccagagcaga caacctattt gaggaaaaac agtgaaatcc accttcctct tcacactgag 2280 ccctctctga ttcctccgtg ttgtgatgtg atgctggcca cgtttccaaa cggcagctcc 2340 actgggtccc ctttggttgt aggacaggaa atgaaacatt aggagctctg cttggaaaac 2400 agttcactac ttagggattt ttgtttccta aaacttttat tttgaggagc agtagttttc 2460 tatgttttaa tgacagaact tggctaatgg aattcacaga ggtgttgcag cgtatcactg 2520 ttatgatcct gtgtttagat tatccactca tgcttctcct attgtactgc aggtgtacct 2580 taaaactgtt cccagtgtac ttgaacagtt gcatttataa ggggggaaat gtggtttaat 2640 ggtgcctgat atctcaaagt cttttgtaca taacatatat atatatatac atatata 2697 28 1988 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 2124411CB1 28 ccgagctgcg gagtccggga ctggagctgc ccgggcgggt tcgcgccccg aaggctgaga 60 gctggcgctg ctcgtgccct gtgtgccaga cggcggagct ccgcggccgg accccgcggc 120 cccgctttgc tgccgactgg agtttggggg aagaaactct cctgcgcccc agaggatttc 180 ttcctcggcg aagggacagc gaaagatgag ggtggcagga agagaagggc gctttctgtc 240 tgccggggtc gcagcgcgag agggcagtgc catgttcctc tccatcctag tggcgctgtg 300 cctgtggctg cacctggcgc tgggcgtgcg cggcgcgccc tgcgaggcgg tgcgcatccc 360 tatgtgccgg cacatgccct ggaacatcac gcggatgccc aaccacctgc accacagcac 420 gcaggagaac gccatcctgg ccatcgagca gtacgaggag ctggtggacg tgaactgcag 480 cgccgtgctg cgcttcttcc tctgtgccat gtacgcgccc atttgcaccc tggagttcct 540 gcacgaccct atcaagccgt gcaagtcggt gtgccaacgc gcgcgcgacg actgcgagcc 600 cctcatgaag atgtacaacc acagctggcc cgaaagcctg gcctgcgacg agctgcctgt 660 ctatgaccgt ggcgtgtgca tctcgcctga agccatcgtc acggacctcc cggaggatgt 720 taagtggata gacatcacac cagacatgat ggtacaggaa aggcctcttg atgttgactg 780 taaacgccta agccccgatc ggtgcaagtg taaaaaggtg aagccaactt tggcaacgta 840 tctcagcaaa aactacagct atgttattca tgccaaaata aaagctgtgc agaggagtgg 900 ctgcaatgag gtcacaacgg tggtggatgt aaaagagatc ttcaagtcct catcacccat 960 ccctcgaact caagtcccgc tcattacaaa ttcttcttgc cagtgtccac acatcctgcc 1020 ccatcaagat gttctcatca tgtgttacga gtggcgttca aggatgatgc ttcttgaaaa 1080 ttgcttagtt gaaaaatgga gagatcagct tagtaaaaga tccatacagt gggaagagag 1140 gctgcaggaa cagcggagaa cagttcagga caagaagaaa acagccgggc gcaccagtcg 1200 tagtaatccc cccaaaccaa agggaaagcc tcctgctccc aaaccagcca gtcccaagaa 1260 gaacattaaa actaggagtg cccagaagag aacaaacccg aaaagagtgt gagctaacta 1320 gtttccaaag cggagacttc cgacttcctt acaggatgag gctgggcatt gcctgggaca 1380 gcctatgtaa ggccatgtgc cccttgccct aacaactcac tgcagtgctc ttcatagaca 1440 catcttgcag catttttctt aaggctatgc ttcagttttt ctttgtaagc catcacaagc 1500 catagtggta ggtttgccct ttggtacaga aggtgagtta aagctggtgg aaaaggctta 1560 ttgcattgca ttcagagtaa cctgtgtgca tactctagaa gagtagggaa aataatgctt 1620 gttacaattc gacctaatat gtgcattgta aaataaatgc catatttcaa acaaaacacg 1680 taattttttt acagtatgtt ttattacctt ttgatatctg ttgttgcaat gttagtgatg 1740 ttttaaaatg tgatcgaaaa tataatgctt ctaagaagga acagtagtgg aatgaatgtc 1800 taaaagatct ttatgtgttt atggtctgca gaaggatttt tgtgatgaaa ggggattttt 1860 tgaaaaatct agagaagtag catatggaaa attataatgt gtctttttta caatgacttc 1920 agctctgttt ttagctagaa actctaaaaa caaaaataat aataaagaaa aataaaaaaa 1980 aaggagag 1988 29 4578 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 7495634CB1 29 gcggccgcgg gagcccgcgc cccgcccgcc gcgcctctgc cgggacccac ccgcagcgga 60 gggctgagcc cgccggcggc tccccggagc tcacccacct ccgcgcgccg gagcgcaggc 120 aaaaggggag gaaaggctcc tctctttagt caccactctc gccctctcca agaatttgtt 180 taacaaagcg ctgaggaaag agaacgtctt cttgaattct ttagtagggg cggagtctgc 240 tgctgccctg cgctgccacc tcggctacac tgccctccgc gacgacccct gaccagccgg 300 ggtcacgtcc gggagacggg atcatgaagc gctcggtagc cgtctggctc ttggtcgggc 360 tcagcctcgg tgtcccccag ttcggcaaag gtgatatttg tgatcccaat ccatgtgaaa 420 atggaggtat ctgtttgcca ggattggctg atggttcctt ttcctgtgag tgtccagatg 480 gcttcacaga ccccaactgt tctagtgttg tggaggttgg tccctgcact cctaatccat 540 gccataatgg aggaacctgt gaaataagtg aagcataccg aggggataca ttcataggct 600 atgtttgtaa atgtccccga ggatttaatg ggattcactg tcagcacaac ataaatgaat 660 gcgaagttga gccttgcaaa aatggtggaa tatgtacaga tcttgttgct aactattcct 720 gtgagtgccc aggcgaattt atgggaagaa attgtcaata caaatgctca ggcccactgg 780 gaattgaagg tggaattata tcaaaccagc aaatcacagc ttcctctact caccgagctc 840 tttttggact ccaaaaatgg tatccctact atgcacgtct taataagaag gggcttataa 900 atgcgtggac agctgcagaa aatgacagat ggccgtggat tcagataaat ttgcaaagga 960 aaatgagagt tactggtgtg attacccaag gagccaagag gattggaagc ccagagtata 1020 taaaatccta caaaattgcc tacagtaatg atggaaagac ttgggcaatg tacaaagtga 1080 aaggcaccaa tgaagacatg gtgtttcgtg gaaacattga taacaacact ccatatgcta 1140 actctttcac accccccata aaagctcagt atgtaagact ctatccccaa gtttgtcgaa 1200 gacattgcac tttgcgaatg gaacttcttg gctgtgaact gtcgggttgt tctgagcctc 1260 tgggtatgaa atcaggacat atacaagact atcagatcac tgcctccagc atcttcagaa 1320 cgctcaacat ggacatgttc acttgggaac caaggaaagc tcggctggac aagcaaggca 1380 aagtgaatgc ctggacctct ggccacaatg accagtcaca atggttacag gtggatcttc 1440 ttgttccaac caaagtgact ggcatcatta cacaaggagc taaagatttt ggtcatgtac 1500 agtttgttgg ctcctacaaa ctggcttaca gcaatgatgg agaacactgg actgtatacc 1560 aggatgaaaa gcaaagaaaa gataaggttt tccagggaaa ttttgacaat gacactcaca 1620 gaaaaaatgt catcgaccct cccatctatg cacgacacat aagaatcctt ccttggtcct 1680 ggtacgggag gatcacattg cggtcagagc tgctgggctg cacagaggag gaatgagggg 1740 aggctacatt tcacaaccct cttccctatt tccctaaaag tatctccatg gaatgaactg 1800 tgcaaaatct gtaggaaact gaatggtttt tttttttttt tcatgaaaaa gtgctcaaat 1860 tatggtaggc aactaacggt gtttttaagg gggtctaagc ctgccttttc aatgatttaa 1920 tttgatttta ttttatccgt caaatctctt aagtaacaac acattaagtg tgaattactt 1980 ttctctcatt gtttcctgaa ttattcgcat tggtagaaat atattaggga aagaaagtag 2040 ccttcttttt atagcaagag taaaaaagtc tcaaagtcat caaataagag caagagttga 2100 tagagctttt acaatcaata ctcacctaat tctgataaaa ggaatactgc aatgttagca 2160 ataagttttt ttcttctgta atgactctac gttatcctgt ttccctgtgc ctaccaaaca 2220 ctgtcaatgt ttattacaaa attttaaaga agaatatgta acatgcagta ctgatattat 2280 aattctcatt ttactttcat tatttctaat aagagattat gtgacttctt tttcttttag 2340 ttctattcta cattcttaat attgtatatt acctgaataa ttcaattttt ttctaattga 2400 atttcctatt agttgactaa aagaagtgtc atgtttactc atatatgtag aacatgactg 2460 cctatcagta gattgatctg tatttaatat tcgttaatta aatctgcagt tttatttttg 2520 aaggaagcca taactattta atttccaaat aattgcttca taaagaatcc catactctca 2580 gtttgcacaa aagaacaaaa aatatatatg tctctttaaa tttaaatctt catttagatg 2640 gtaattacat atccttatat ttactttaaa aaatcggctt atttgtttat tttataaaaa 2700 atttagcaaa gaaatattaa tatagtgctg catagtttgg ccaagcatac tcatcatttc 2760 tttgttcagc tccacatttc ctgtgaaact aacatcttat tgagatttga aactggtggt 2820 agtttcccag gaaggcacag gtggagttat ttgtgagaag caaagtgttt actaatgaca 2880 aagtagtaaa ccattttcaa gatgaaaact gatttctatt tattttgctt caaaggtcct 2940 gaaaaaataa gcaattatca taacaatttg ttattgatac tggaggtttc attgacatgt 3000 ctctcaaatt aaagctcaca ctgcctccat aaaagtcttc aacatctaat ttataagctt 3060 tacaagtatt tattttataa ggcttagaca gaattattgg agttttaaat taagtgtatt 3120 ggaaaagaaa ggatggtatg tgtatgaaat gttaagatcc tacgcaacac tgctattttt 3180 ttcctttaat atttgtgctg cataacaaaa gccactagac tgttactgtc ttgtctgtcc 3240 atgtgttaac agcatttctt aatgatgtat atatggagtg gtcttcaatc atagtgaaga 3300 atttaaagag aaagtcaatt gtattggcat ttttaataag aacaaaatta gttcgtctaa 3360 ggggactggc tggccacata tttgttcctt gcccatatgc tttctacttc ttgttcttat 3420 tatgaaatta tgaatttgaa gcctctgaaa tggtgatcag ttttcaacat ctttcaaaaa 3480 caaaattact atttcctcca tattgccttt tttagataac tttaaagtta ggattttaaa 3540 atatttgtaa ctggctaaat tttaaagtcg tgacaaataa ttacttaggt tcagaaatat 3600 acacacactt actctttagc cagtttcttt caaggtttac tgtcccatca gatatctagc 3660 cattttcctt tgcaaattac ataccttctt aagagtgtat ttttaagatt attacttatg 3720 ctttatgatg atatagtttt tcaaaattat ttatagcttc atatgatgtt ttgtaatttt 3780 ttctattgat acctgtttta aaaatatttt ccaaggaagt tgattaaaat tatatttgtt 3840 accttttaga aaaagcattg aaatgagttt ctcttgcttt ttcattttcc ctctgcttta 3900 tatgctcttc gcaatacatc atgtccaacg ggatacctat tgttctcatg acacccaaaa 3960 ttgatgagag caaaggggtc gcaccatatg gaaatgttga aaactattgt aaagtagtat 4020 tatgaagtag cttttgtgtc attcatgtcg atgacatgaa agtgaagtaa atttattcta 4080 tgtaaattca cactaaaacc agtacagtac cataagtaga atacatgtaa gaatcaccta 4140 gtcttcacta tattgagtaa atataacatg ctaattttac aattaatgaa actaaacttt 4200 taaacatctc cattatatct acatcctttt gaaggtattt atcatagttg ccaattttaa 4260 ttttaggatt gactttctct ttctgaatga cttcataaag tttggtgtga attttgaaga 4320 cttgggttac taatgattgt atctttgcta gtcaacaact tatgaaatat actcaatgcg 4380 tctgatgtgt cattaagtgc agaaataact aagacacaaa taacctttgc aaaccttcaa 4440 gctgtgtaat attccaatgt tgtttttttc tttgtatata tacttatatc acgtaggatg 4500 taaaaccagt atgaccttgt ctagtctcca aacttaaaat aaacttttga aaagctggga 4560 aaaaaaaaaa aaaaaagt 4578 30 1723 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 2602214CB1 30 ggtaagggca gtgagaatga tgcatcttgc attccttgtg ctgttgtgtc tgccagtctg 60 ctctgcctat cctctgagtg gggcagcaaa agaggaggac tccaacaagg atcttgccca 120 gcaataccta gaaaagtact acaacctcga aaaggatgtg aaacagttta gaagaaagga 180 cagtaatctc attgttaaaa aaatccaaag aatgcagaag ttccttgggt tggaggtgac 240 agggaagcta gacactgaca ctctggaggt gatgcgcaag cccaggtgtg gagttcctga 300 cgttggtcac ttcagctcct ttcctggcat gccgaagtgg aggaaaaccc accttacata 360 caggattgtg aattatacac cagatttgcc aagagatgct gttgattctg ccattgagaa 420 agctctgaaa gtctgggaag aggtgactcc actcacattc tccaggctgt atgaaggaga 480 ggctgatata atgatctctt ttgcagttaa agaacatgga gacttttact cttttgatgg 540 cccaggacac agtttggctc atgcctaccc acctggacct gggctttatg gagatattca 600 ctttgatgat gatgaaaaat ggacagaaga tgcatcaggc accaatttat tcctcgttgc 660 tgctcatgaa cttggccact ccttggggct ctttcactca gccaacactg aagctttgat 720 gtacccactc tacaactcat tcacagagct cgcccagttc cgcctttcgc aagatgatgt 780 gaatggcatt cagtctctct acggacctcc ccctgcctct actgaggaac ccctggtgcc 840 cacaaaatct gttccttcgg gatctgagat gccagccaag tgtgatcctg ctttgtcctt 900 cgatgccatc agcactctga ggggagaata tctgttcttt aaagacagat atttttggcg 960 aagatcccac tggaaccctg aacctgaatt tcatttgatt tctgcatttt ggccctctct 1020 tccatcatat ttggatgctg catatgaagt taacagcagg gacaccgttt ttatttttaa 1080 aggaaatgag ttctgggcca tcagaggaaa tgaggtacaa gcaggttatc caagaggcat 1140 ccataccctg ggttttcctc caaccataag gaaaattgat gcagctgttt ctgacaagga 1200 aaagaagaaa acatacttct ttgcagcgga caaatactgg agatttgatg aaaatagcca 1260 gtccatggag caaggcttcc ctagactaat agctgatgac tttccaggag ttgagcctaa 1320 ggttgatgct gtattacagg catttggatt tttctacttc ttcagtggat catcacagtt 1380 tgagtttgac cccaatgcca ggatggtgac acacatatta aagagtaaca gctggttaca 1440 ttgctaggcg agataggggg aagacagata tgggtgtttt taataaatct aataattatt 1500 catctaatgt attatgagcc aaaatggtta atttttcctg catgttctgt gactgaagaa 1560 gatgagcctt gcagatatct gcatgtgtca tgaagaatgt ttctggaatt cttcacttgc 1620 ttttgaattg cactgaacag aattaagaaa tactcatgtg caataggtga gagaatgtat 1680 tttcatagat gtgttattac ttcctcaata aaaagtttta ttt 1723 31 5947 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 238716.1 31 tggaaatgta agtagttgga gtttaggcta tggaaatatt agtgccttta atagatctct 60 ttccttgcaa agtttctttt tagctcagca ttgatctatc ttatcaatag gaaaataagt 120 tgacttggaa ctataaacaa aaacaacacc atatatttat gaacctcagt gaaccagcct 180 agaaaaattg acttctgcag gtgctaaagc acctactaat acgcagcatg cacagcattt 240 caggttgtga ataccatttt acaacgagtt tgctgttaac tctctttatc caatgcaaac 300 ttgaaattct gatgcggttt tccagggtgg tattttttca gagtattgaa tttactattt 360 agtaatttat agtatagctt tttatattaa aatgtgatat ttttaaaaga gatatctggt 420 tcaattggta taatgacgtg attatgcaat atgctgatct acaccttgcg ctcacattgt 480 gccaaactta aatgtgcaag tgtacgtgag aaaagcacat gtgaatgtga attctttaat 540 tctttgctta ttatgttaaa attagtcttc atagtccact gatgtgtatg cttgaataat 600 gtctatttac tttggaattt caagatttcc agcttcaatg gtaatttata atttctcaga 660 tcaccttaag aaatattgag atactctccc acctgaaaat aatctgttct ttaacccacc 720 tgactatggg agtagccagg caggtgcctc actggcttct tcagacgagg cttcctcagg 780 tggatatatg actattaggg gaaaagaggc ttttgagaca gcttattacc tccttcccct 840 ttttgaacta agtacattgt ctcagtccca gtatgaattt gtcccatttg gggtattttt 900 aaaataaaag atggctaaca tggaatctgg ggcatagcct tggcctttaa ttatggttgt 960 aagcccaaat aatggcagag aaacacaggg ctgtttttac aacagaaaac tcaatataag 1020 ttttatataa gaatcctata aaatttgaac cagagctcct atttagttgt tataatgtct 1080 cctaaagatc ttaaatgctt ctaaaagcta attattattc cagagcaact ttttcctttt 1140 cccccttata aagttttttt ttaaatccaa aatcttagat ttctgtgcca cagcaaaata 1200 aaatgatcaa caattaaaga tctgtactta aaatagtaca ccatttttag tggagggagg 1260 gtgcatgcct atatgatggt aagattcttt tgaactctaa ggacaattcc tcatggaaaa 1320 aataaatttc agtgcatatt ataaaaatga tttgcactgt gttagcaaaa taaggtgttt 1380 taggttgtat tttaaagaca attctaaatc atttctctgg aaagcaagac cttaaattct 1440 tctctttaat agaactgctt ttatgcaaag agatggtctt aacatggact aaacagtaca 1500 taacaataat gtttgttatg taaatagtat atcacatttg cttagtagca caattcaaca 1560 gcaggctgaa agtcgtggct cctctgctca gattgagttt taagttacct aatttatgta 1620 atcagaatct attctaggtg gccgtcaacg taaactgtgt ttccctatta tatccctctg 1680 gagactgaga atcaaattaa atagtctttc ttcaaagcag tactgtaaca tgaatgtatt 1740 tatctcagtc aacagaactt atatgcccac tgtatgtgga gcttatttca atgctaattt 1800 ggcttagtta gcagacctag aatctgccca ggtgagacct agaacaaaaa tagctggggt 1860 gaaatggata agagaggtag aggtatatgt caaggcagag ccctatgagg aaggaagagt 1920 tttcaaagaa tatgaggaac atagtgctga gagtgtggct gccttcagca ccgtacacct 1980 aatctagaga aaatatttcc catgtgggag gtcctgtctg cattcagtcc acccttttct 2040 gcctgcttct tcctccaagt gcctcaacct ctacatgctc actctcctcc ccttccctca 2100 gcccatcttg gtctaagcag ctttcacaat ccaaaccaaa catcaccagc cacccgctga 2160 taagtcacca gcatttactt tcctgagtta ctttttctcc attcattgag actatggatt 2220 catcccaact ccttctaaat ccctcaacca tccagctata ttttggctaa cctttgccct 2280 agacactcta ccagatgtta atgcagtatc aagtgtaaat tgtgtcaccc tattctgttc 2340 tacccttttc cctgctgccg aaatatcttg ctctcctcta cctcatcccc aaagagccta 2400 taaattcaga gtatccaacc ttttcatgga ttcactcact gttgttcagt aatacaactt 2460 ccatatttta aataaatcat aaaagatttt tgccttctat caaagtagga aactttatat 2520 ttatacatga tacagaaatt gaactatttc tatcgttcag aatttagcat ataacaggat 2580 tttaaagtga ttgaattgcc atcctaactt ggatttgtat taggttatga atgaatactg 2640 ttgttagtcc aagctatttg aatgtaaagt taaaattctc cagcaatcca gaatgacttg 2700 taacccttca gtggaatggg aaatttctgg tatgcaaata gggtggtgtt ccagacattt 2760 gttttattgg tggtgtttgg gccttgaaac acatttctaa tagaatgaca tatggcaaag 2820 ggtatttaga tggtcctatg ggatcacaga agcccatatg atttaaaata tagataaaat 2880 aacacaaaat tgggtacata agggtttaac caggctttcc tgggttagac taagcctcta 2940 acctctgttc ctatcctgtt cttatgggag gaaaaaaaat gttccatggg atgaaaagaa 3000 aatgcattga ctttgtagtc tttattctcc tagccgcact tcgggtatat ccagaaggaa 3060 gaggaaatgc aaagaggaag aagatgtaat agttcttctc tccagctagg tgcacttgag 3120 gttgttcata aatgtaaaat tatgtcaggt ttctaacatg ggacactgca cacagttgtc 3180 tgacctgatg aaccatccca tttgaaagta tagattatta ttatttcttg tagtatttgg 3240 ttgttttcca tctcattcat gaacaactca acctgatagt agtatccaat aaatgccttt 3300 cagggctcag gaatgaattg acatcctagt taagaaatga gacttaataa tggagactga 3360 atgaggcggt ttgtattaaa ttatatgcca tgaagtgttc attttagctt taacctaatt 3420 atgactgtac caccatgaag tacagaatga aaaattatat atatgggggg gaaacagaat 3480 gaatatctga ttcttttgaa tgcttgtgga aatctttgag atcgtgcagg gcataccaca 3540 aaatagcctt tagaacagat acccaatttt acagttcata ggacaacatc aaacattagt 3600 aagtctaaat aagatgaata gaatttttgt tatgtaaatt ttgctagaac agtctatttt 3660 cttgcacccc tcaagttaac ctcttaaaaa aatgaatgta taatttctac cgaaagaata 3720 tcagagagaa tctctctggc ctatagtgtt aaaatattgt tcacaaatcc tgattagtta 3780 agtgcataca ttatgaaact tacagaataa aacttattat acatctcttt cttaaattaa 3840 tatctttaca cattttcaac tggctcccca agtctgataa ggaaggatta aaagaaaaaa 3900 gaaatgtatt agttgggtgg ccaaggagtt tcctttgtaa tgttgagaga cttccgcttt 3960 ctgaatttcg ctggttctct aaggtaaaag agttaaatag tacccttgtt caccaaggaa 4020 agtgatccaa actatatatc tagtgcagat atttcctttg cattatttag tcttctctgg 4080 agagaaaata cagtttcccc ttcctctttc tcttcacatt tactcttttc aacccaaaat 4140 aagagacata gaaagcaaac cacagccagt ttggcatctt ctcagtgcta ctagtatagg 4200 cacatacaca tacacagtct cagcaaggtt ataaagaacc ctgtcaggtc cacttgcaac 4260 atggccttgc tacttggatt agctccttta agcctgaaaa taactttcct ggtcatggaa 4320 gaactggacg catcttttaa cttatgaaat agaagttgaa cttgaaaact ctttttaaaa 4380 aatcctggtt ttgcaggaca gctacataat gaatgtatat attaagactg tagctgaatt 4440 gcacatgaaa tcagattgcc aacttcttga ctttcaatgt tagacattta tccttaagtt 4500 gtgagcgata tatgtagcat gctgtgaaat gtctgttata gctctttaat tcatcagtat 4560 taatacagaa ctatcatttg cgtttcttgg tactttttat tcaatgtaat cagaagctgt 4620 gatgttttgc ctttgtagtc ctgtgctttg ttactgtaat tttttttttt ttttacgaag 4680 cacgtgactg gactaatgta aggcagatga cgtgatcttt aagactgcta tatatatcag 4740 tctcttactc tataaggttt taaattagaa taagctttta tcaaatagat aattgatgca 4800 atttaggatt cacgcaagtt tcagtgtcaa atggcggtct tatagtttca attctgaaaa 4860 tagcaaactt aataaacagc cactttaaac ttgttctggc aaaccagacc ctgctgtaga 4920 tatagtctaa ggtagttaac catataagcc ttttcaactc ttaatgccct ccacatgaat 4980 cagcagttaa gaaggttcta gaacccatga aagcttttgt atgtattact aggttttgtt 5040 tttcttatgt ttgctgattt tacagttctg actaaagctg acctaaatgg atcagtttat 5100 gtgtaatatt ctagtgcttt aatgactctt tttttctttg gagggagggt aacattattt 5160 ggacagatgc agaaggaact gttagtgagt caagacaaac acatctgaaa taaaggaact 5220 gtgtattaac atgttaacaa ttcataactg cactttttat gacattttga aaatctattt 5280 ataggtacag aacaatgggt tttgttaaac tgtatcacat ttatacttgc agaaatttat 5340 ttcattgtta ttagtaggaa ttttattggt tcaataaaat tggcaaaact gaacaccaat 5400 catttgccta ctttgtttat actggagtag cattctcgct tggtttattt ctgcttgagt 5460 tattgagaca tgcattctta aagatatcag aattatagga gtcattattt tcactatttt 5520 tttcctgacc cagtttcctg gtgatatttc ttatcactca ctcaatattc tattggtgga 5580 atattgcaaa gagtgtaagt tgtgcaaaat atatagttat tgttaccttt taaaatatca 5640 attgtgatct tagcaagagg caaattaact ttattattgt ctcttgttaa ccaaagcagt 5700 aattagaatg aggaaagagg catcgaacat aaggttggat taaaggcctg gattaaaaaa 5760 cctagttttt ttcatattct actagctttg cgaccttgaa agtaaattaa tctctatgca 5820 tctttgattt ctgcactaca ttctatcagg agtaatacct tcttgagatg gttaagaatt 5880 aggtgatgtg tactcatgta tttgaaatat acagcacaat aatgagcttg aatggataaa 5940 cagccag 5947 32 1267 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 899473.7 32 tttttttcag agtgctaggg ctttattaca aatggagttg actgctagag aggcccttct 60 ccaatctttc ttctgtacct tcttccctcc caaagacatc cctctagggg aggtcagtag 120 gccattaggt aggaggaaat ctggagagtg aaaaggggcc ttgcttttgt caaagtcctc 180 tgaaacaacc actgagtctg aaggctggct ccagttgaga atcttctagt ggaagaggtt 240 tagctctcat cttcaaggtc cttcatttct acatcctggg gggcttttgt cttcttttgc 300 cttttgagct gtggttcact agtcctggct ggctttgaag gggcttccac ttccatggct 360 gtcttctctt tctgggcaag ccggatctgc tggaggactt ttctgcgctt cttccctgac 420 agtgtaatgt tggcacgtgc actggacgcc cgcttcttga ggtggtgccg cgtgatcagc 480 ccttggtcta tcacagcccc gaccacccgg tgcctcagac gccgctcccg attcaacacc 540 caccggcccc gaacggagct gaagaagaag ctgttcaaac gccggcgggt gttgaatcgg 600 gagcggcgtc tgaggcaccg ggtggtcggg gctgtgatag accaagggct gatcacgcgg 660 caccacctca agaagcgggc gtccagtgca cgtgccaaca ttacactgtc agggaagaag 720 cgcagaaaac tcctccagca gatccggctt gcccagaaag agaagacagc catggaagtg 780 gaagcccctt caaagccagc caggactagt gaaccacagc tcaaaaggca aaagaagaca 840 aaagcccccc aggatgtaga aatgaaggac cttgaagatg agagctaaac ctcttccact 900 agaagattct caactggagc cagccttcag actcagtggt tgtttcagag gactttgaca 960 aaagcaaggc cccttttcac tctccagatt tcctcctacc taatggccta ctgacctccc 1020 ctagagggat gtctttggga gggaagaagg tacagaagaa agattggaga agggcctctc 1080 tagcagtcaa ctccatttgt aataaagccc tagcactctg agatgtgtgt gattaaatgt 1140 aggaatgggg atgggtcatg aaaagattgg ggagtatgga aacaagacag tgaggaagca 1200 gtacccacag cttccttgtg caaatgcaac aagatgccag cctctgccct caagagtggt 1260 ggtgcct 1267 33 1142 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 1453266.4 33 ccccaccata tgtattttct aggatttgag aggaaagaga ggaaaatggg ggaatgggtt 60 gcaaaataga aatgagctta atccaggccg cagagccagg gaaggtgagt aactttagga 120 gggtgctaga ctttagaagc cagataggaa gaatcagtct aaactggcca tgctttggaa 180 gggacaagac tatgtgctcc gctgcccacc ttcagcctgc aatgagggac tgaggcccac 240 gagtctttcc agctcttcct ccattctggc cagtccctgc atcctccctg gggtggagga 300 tggaaggaaa gctgggacaa gcagggaacg catgattcag ggatgctgtc actcggcagc 360 cagattccga aactcccatt ctccaatgac ttcctcaacc aatgggtggc cttgtgactg 420 ttctttaagg ctgaagatat ccaggaaagg gggcttggac actggccaag gagacccctt 480 cgtgctgtgg acacagctct cttcactctt tgctcatggc atgacacagc ggagaccgcc 540 tccaacaacg aatttggggc tacgaagagg aatagcgaaa aagcaaatct gtttcaactg 600 atgggaaccc tatagctata gaacttgggg gctatctcct atgcccctgg acaggacagt 660 tggctgggga caggagaagt gctcaatctt catgagacaa aggggcccga tagggccagc 720 agccacaagg ccttgacctg ccgagtcagc atgccccatc tctctgcaca gctgtcccct 780 aaacccaact cacgtttctg tatgtcttag gccagtatcc caaacctctt ccacgtcact 840 gttctttcca cccattctcc ctttgcatct tgagcagtta tccaactagg atctgccaag 900 tggatactgg ggtgccactc ccctgagaaa agactgagcc aggaactaca agctcccccc 960 acattcctcc cagcctggac ctaattcttg agaggggctc tctcttcacg gactgtgtct 1020 ggactttgag caggcttctg ccccttgcgt tggctctttg ctgccagcca tcaggtgggg 1080 gattagagcc tggtgtaagt gcgccagact cttccggttt ccaaagttcg tgcctgcgaa 1140 cc 1142 34 1969 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 696973CB1 34 cctagctggg atattggagc agcaagaggc tgggaagcca tcacttacct tgcactgaga 60 aagaagacaa aggccagtat gcacagcttt cctccactgc tgctgctgct gttctggggt 120 gtggtgtctc acagcttccc agcgactcta gaaacacaag agcaagatgt ggacttagtc 180 cagaaatacc tggaaaaata ctacaacctg aagaatgatg ggaggcaagt tgaaaagcgg 240 agaaatagtg gcccagtggt tgaaaaattg aagcaaatgc aggaattctt tgggctgaaa 300 gtgactggga aaccagatgc tgaaaccctg aaggtgatga agcagcccag atgtggagtg 360 cctgatgtgg ctcagtttgt cctcactgag gggaaccctc gctgggagca aacacatctg 420 acctacagga ttgaaaatta cacgccagat ttgccaagag cagatgtgga ccatgccatt 480 gagaaagcct tccaactctg gagtaatgtc acacctctga cattcaccaa ggtctctgag 540 ggtcaagcag acatcatgat atcttttgtc aggggagatc atcgggacaa ctctcctttt 600 gatggacctg gaggaaatct tgctcatgct tttcaaccag gcccaggtat tggaggggat 660 gctcattttg atgaagatga aaggtggacc aacaatttca gagagtacaa cttacatcgt 720 gttgcggctc atgaactcgg ccattctctt ggactctccc attctactga tatcggggct 780 ttgatgtacc ctagctacac cttcagtggt gatgttcagc tagctcagga tgacattgat 840 ggcatccaag ccatatatgg acgttcccaa aatcctgtcc agcccatcgg cccacaaacc 900 ccaaaagcgt gtgacagtaa gctaaccttt gatgctataa ctacgattcg gggagaagtg 960 atgttcttta aagacagatt ctacatgcgc acaaatccct tctacccgga agttgagctc 1020 aatttcattt ctgttttctg gccacaactg ccaaatgggc ttgaagctgc ttacgaattt 1080 gccgacagag atgaagtccg gtttttcaaa gggaataagt actgggctgt tcagggacag 1140 aatgtgctac acggataccc caaggacatc tacagctcct ttggcttccc tagaactgtg 1200 aagcatatcg atgctgctct ttctgaggaa aacactggaa aaacctactt ctttgttgct 1260 aacaaatact ggaggtatga tgaatataaa cgatctatgg atccaggtta tcccaaaatg 1320 atagcacatg actttcctgg aattggccac aaagttgatg cagttttcat gaaagatgga 1380 tttttctatt tctttcatgg aacaagacaa tacaaatttg atcctaaaac gaagagaatt 1440 ttgactctcc agaaagctaa tagctggttc aactgcagga aaaattgaac attactaatt 1500 tgaatggaaa acacatggtg tgagtccaaa gaaggtgttt tcctgaagaa ctgtctattt 1560 tctcagtcat ttttaacctc tagagtcact gatacacaga atataatctt atttatacct 1620 cagtttgcat atttttttac tatttagaat gtagcccttt ttgtactgat ataatttagt 1680 tccacaaatg gtgggtacaa aaagtcaagt ttgtggctta tggattcata taggccagag 1740 ttgcaaagat cttttccaga gtatgcaact ctgacgttga tcccagagag cagcttcagt 1800 gacaaacata tcctttcaag acagaaagag acaggagaca tgagtctttg ccggaggaaa 1860 agcagctcaa gaacacatgt gcagtcactg gtgtcaccct ggataggcaa gggataactc 1920 ttctaacaca aaataagtgt tttatgtttg gaataaagtc aaccttgtt 1969 35 2247 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 346431.1 35 aacaaatcaa ccttgtccta tgttaggcag ctggaggcaa gagtaagaca gctggaggaa 60 gaaaatcgca tgctgcccag gccagccaga atagaaggca acctccaact agaaacagct 120 caaatatgga gaaaggctgg gggtccagag cccggcgggt cttgcagtgg tggcaagggt 180 gccgaggaat aggacgatgc ctgcctactc tcccgggttc ttttaggttg tcatcagggg 240 ctgatgggag taacagttca cccaactctg cagctagctt cagtggacat gccacacctt 300 cccagcagcc tgaacctgtg gtacattctc ttaaggttgt gtggaggaaa cttggagatg 360 ctgcaggttc gtgtcctgga attaggcaac atttgtcagg aaaccagtac aaaggaccaa 420 tgtgagatgc actctttttc aaacaggaga tcaccactgc cagaaagtga tagaagacaa 480 gaagaagaaa aaggaaagag tgggtttcca caaacctgga ctcatggaat aacatggagt 540 gattgtacat tgcacatatc tcccctctaa aacctgtagt acaacttctc ccctcaagct 600 gatattctgt gtctctcacc tcaatgtcca caacagtcaa tctcaaacaa ggtagctttg 660 aaaatctcaa acagagtagc tttgaaaatc aacattttgg taccagtgtt ttcattagaa 720 ataagtgttt ttaactcccc agatataata ttgtaattgg gaaacctgaa tagttttaag 780 agtccagtgg agcctcagtg ttttgaatag agatgactca ttacacataa tggtaggagt 840 tttctaccat atcatattga agatatgaag aggtattttc cagcttccca agtttgagag 900 ttgggcattt acctcttaca cttcagtcaa caaacaaact agtaattcct aatgcataat 960 taatttggat gcaagataag attaagtttc tggagttttg ttttgacttc tgaggtgcta 1020 aaaaatacca tgtaaattct ccctaccagc tagaagggta gcaagacgtt gtagagtgct 1080 tatcagagag taccatttac ttcaattgat caatataaat atatcttttt ttttcatctt 1140 aatgagtttc tcataaagac acatcttggg gcataccaac cttcatattc attcagtgta 1200 tccattggtg ttaatattaa caatttcaac taaaaacaac aaacataatt tttctaagtg 1260 tttcgagctg tgagatgtca atttctacaa tttagtttct agacatgctg tatatttaat 1320 aaactttatg taaactttaa aatattgcac tgcatttatg aaaaaagctt tctttgccta 1380 ctgcagctat ctaacatttt atgaaactga cgcatgtcct tcattattga ggctaaaagc 1440 tcttgttcag attgcttgag gtttgaaaaa gaggtgtgct agctttgctt agtttatttc 1500 ttatttttgg tatacatata catatatata acattagaat gtgtgtactg gaaatgctat 1560 gataggtatt ttgtgttaat ccaaatgcaa tgatagtttc ttgtatgaat gtgcaagagg 1620 cctgtgaccg aatgctacgt ttttatggta gtttaagatt ataaaagtag aaatgcaaca 1680 attcccagtt tttggatagg ttctaaattt ctgagatttg attcatggca gatattctct 1740 gttgttgttg ttttagatgg gctcattaca taacgagtta attgtcacta gtaggagact 1800 gtgaaggaat tttgttatac tttcaaaaat gttactgtga tgaaaaatca tctattttca 1860 gaaaatattt atgaattaat ttactataga attatctctc taattatcat aattgggtta 1920 caatttaagc tcccctttta aatgttatat tttaaaatgt tattactcta taaaagaaaa 1980 ttgcttgcta tatttacacc ttctttccta ggaaagcttt catccttaaa ttgttgtatt 2040 cctaccctct gaagacattt aaaataagct tttgtgcctg cagcagagcc tgcagaagct 2100 aatacaaggg acactggtct tttgacaaaa taaacttgtg taaattttga tactgtatta 2160 aaactatttt tttaaagttc tgcataaaat tgagtattaa gtatatgtgt tcatcttagc 2220 aatggtaata aattatttaa tctcaaa 2247 36 3497 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 1382919.78 36 ctgcagggcc ccaacaaccc tcaccaaagg ccaaggtggt gaccgacgga cccacagcgg 60 ggtggctggg ggagtcgaaa ctcgccagtc tccactccac tcccaaccgt ggtgccccac 120 gcgggcctgg gagagtctgt gaggccgccc accgcttgtc agtagagtgc gcccgcgagc 180 cgtaagcaca gcccggcaac atgcggtctt cagacaggaa agtggccgcg aatgggaccg 240 gggtgcccag cggctgtggg gactctgtcc tgcggaaacc gcggtgacga gcacaagctc 300 ggtcaactgg atgggaatcg gcctgggggg ctggcaccgc gcccaccagg gggtttgcgg 360 cacttccctc tgcccctcag caccccaccc ctactctcca ggaacgtgag gtctgagccg 420 tgatggtggc aggaaggggc cctctgtgcc atccgagtcc ccagggaccc gcagctggcc 480 cccagccatg tgcaaagtat gtgcagggcg ctggcaggca gggagcagca ggcatggtgt 540 cccctgaggg gagacagtgg tctgggaggg agaggtcctg gaccctgagg gaggtgatgg 600 ggcaatgctc agccctgtct ccggatgcca aaggaggggt gcggggaggc cgtctttgga 660 gaattccagg atgggtgctg ggtgagagag acgtgtgctg gaactgtcca gggcggaggt 720 gggccctgcg ggggccctcg ggagggccct gctctgattg gccggcaggg caggggcggg 780 aattctggcg ggccacccca gttagaaaaa gcccgggcta ggaccgagga gcagggtgag 840 ggagggggtg ggatgggtgg ggggtaacgg gggaaactgg ggaagtgggg aaccgagggg 900 caaccagggg aagatggggt gctggaggag agcttgtggg agccaaggag caccttggac 960 atctggagtc tggcaggagt gatgacgggt ggaggggcta gctcgaggca gggctggtgg 1020 ggcctgaggc cagtgaggag tgtggagtag gtgcccaggc atcgtgcaga cagggcgaca 1080 tcagctgggg acgatgggcc tgagctaggg ctggaaagaa gggggagcca ggcattcatc 1140 ccggtcactt ttggttacag gacgtggcag ctggttggac gaggggagct ggtgggcagg 1200 gtttgatccc agggcctggg caacggaggt gtagctggca gcagcgggca ggtgaggacc 1260 ccatctgccg ggcaggtgag tcccttccct ccccaggcct cgcttcccca gccttctgaa 1320 agaaggaggt ttaggggatc gagggctggc ggggagaagc agacaccctc ccagcagagg 1380 ggcaggatgg gggcaggaga gttagcaaag gtgacatctt ctcgggggga gccgagactg 1440 cgcaaggctg gggggttatg ggcccgttcc aggcagaaag agcaagaggg cagggaggga 1500 gcacaggggt ggccagcgta gggtccagca cgtggggtgg taccccaggc ctgggtcaga 1560 cagggacatg gcaggggaca caggacagag gggtccccag ctgccacctc acccaccgca 1620 attcatttag tagcaggcac aggggcagct ccggcacggc tttctcaggc ctatgccgga 1680 gcctcgaggg ctggagagcg ggaagacagg cagtgctcgg ggagttgcag caggacgtca 1740 ccaggagggc gaagcggcca cgggaggggg gccccgggac attgcgcagc aaggaggctg 1800 caggggctcg gcctgcgggc gccggtccca cgaggcactg cggcccaggg tctggtgcgg 1860 agagggccca cagtggactt ggtgacgctg tatgccctca ccgctcagcc cctggggctg 1920 gcttggcaga cagtacagca tccaggggag tcaagggcat ggggcgagac cagactaggc 1980 gaggcgggcg gggcggagtg aatgagctct caggagggag gatggtgcag gcaggggtga 2040 ggagcgcagc gggcggcgag cgggaggcac tggcctccag agcccgtggc caaggcgggc 2100 ctcgcgggcg gcgacggagc cgggatcggt gcctcagcgt tcgggctgga gacgagggtg 2160 agtttttccc cctctgccac cctcagcccc cacccgcccc tccccacaca accaacacgt 2220 tctccccaca cgactctctc gttctcccca cagccaggtc tccagctggg gtggacgtgc 2280 ccaccagctg ccgaaggcca agacgccagg tccggtggac gtgacaagca ggacatgaca 2340 tggtccggtg tgacggcgag gacagaggag gcgcgtccgg ccttcctggt gagcgtgtct 2400 gccctccctg cgtcaggacg gccctgccca gaccgccccg cgccaccatc tcactgcccc 2460 gacctctgtc ttctacagaa caccttaggc tggtggggct gcggcaagaa gcgggtctgt 2520 ttctttactt cctccacgga gtcggcacac tatggctgcc ctctgggctc ccagaaccca 2580 caacatgaaa ggtgagggnc ttcctgccac acttggggtg gggggcacgc gagaggagct 2640 gagtgggacc tcaactcctt ccccatccac agaaatggtg ctacccagct caagcctggg 2700 cctttgaatc cggacacaaa accctctagc ttggaaatga atatgctgca ctttacaacc 2760 actgcactac ctgactcagg aatcggctct ggaaggtgag caccagcgct ccttnggaag 2820 cctccaggcc cccgagcacc ctgcccccat cccacccacg tgtcgctatc tctaggtgaa 2880 gctagaggaa ccagacctca tcagcccaac atcaaagaca ccatcggaac agcagcgccc 2940 gcagcaccca ccccgcaccg gcgactccat cttcatggcc accccctgcg gtggacggtt 3000 gaccaccagc caccacatca tcccagagct gagctcctcc agcgggatga cgccgtcccc 3060 accacctccc tcttcttctt tttcatcctt ctgtctcttt gtttctgagc tttcctgtct 3120 ttcctttttt ctgagagatt caaagcctcc acgactctgt ttcccccgtc ccttctgaat 3180 ttaatttgca ctaagtcatt tgcactggtt ggagttgtgg agacggcctt gagtctcagt 3240 acgagtgtgc gtgagtgtga gccaccttgg caagtgcctg tgcagggccc ggccgccctc 3300 catctgggcc gggtgactgg gcgccggctg tgtgcccgag gcctcaccct gccctcgcct 3360 agtctggaag ctccgaccga catcacggag cagcctttca agcatttcca ttacgcccca 3420 tctcgctctg ttgccccctc ccccacaggg cttcagcagg agccctggac tcatcatcaa 3480 taaacactgt ttacagc 3497 37 1755 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 947429CB1 37 cgctgtcggt gcggcggcgc gcgtgcgggt gcaaacccga gcgtctacgc tgccatgagg 60 ggcgcgaacg cctgggcgcc actctgcctg ctgctggctg ccgccaccca gctctcgcgg 120 cagcagtccc cagagagacc tgttttcaca tgtggtggca ttcttactgg agagtctgga 180 tttattggca gtgaaggttt tcctggagtg taccctccaa atagcaaatg tacttggaaa 240 atcacagttc ccgaaggaaa agtagtcgtt ctcaatttcc gattcataga cctcgagagt 300 gacaacctgt gccgctatga ctttgtggat gtgtacaatg gccatgccaa tggccagcgc 360 attggccgct tctgtggcac tttccggcct ggagcccttg tgtccagtgg caacaagatg 420 atggtgcaga tgatttttga tgccaacaca gctggcaatg gcttcatggc catgttctcc 480 gctgctgaac caaacgaaag aggggatcag tattgtggag gactccttga cagaccttcc 540 ggctctttta aaacccccaa ctggccagac cgggattacc ctgcaggagt cacttgtgtg 600 tggcacattg tagccccaaa gaatcagctt atagaattaa agtttgagaa gtttgatgtg 660 gagcgagata actactgccg atatgattat gtggctgtgt ttaatggcgg ggaagtcaac 720 gatgctagaa gaattggaaa gtattgtggt gatagtccac ctgcgccaat tgtgtctgag 780 agaaatgaac ttcttattca gtttttatca gacttaagtt taactgcaga tgggtttatt 840 ggtcactaca tattcaggcc aaaaaaactg cctacaacta cagaacagcc tgtcaccacc 900 acattccctg taaccacggg tttaaaaccc accgtggcct tgtgtcaaca aaagtgtaga 960 cggacgggga ctctggaggg caattattgt tcaagtgact ttgtattagc cggcactgtt 1020 atcacaacca tcactcgcga tgggagtttg cacgccacag tctcgatcat caacatctac 1080 aaagagggaa atttggcgat tcagcaggcg ggcaagaaca tgagtgccag gctgactgtc 1140 gtctgcaagc agtgccctct cctcagaaga ggtctaaatt acattattat gggccaagta 1200 ggtgaagatg ggcgaggcaa aatcatgcca aacagcttta tcatgatgtt caagaccaag 1260 aatcagaagc tcctggatgc cttaaaaaat aagcaatgtt aacagtgaac tgtgtccatt 1320 taagctgtat tctgccattg cctttgaaag atctatgttc tctcagtaga aaaaaaaata 1380 cttataaaat tacatattct gaaagaggat tccgaaagat gggactggtt gactcttcac 1440 atgatggagg tatgaggcct ccgagatagc tgagggaagt tctttgcctg ctgtcagagg 1500 agcagctatc tgattggaaa cctgccgact tagtgcggtg ataggaagct aaaagtgtca 1560 agcgttgaca gcttggaagc gtttatttat acatctctgt aaaaggatat tttagaattg 1620 agttgtgtga agatgtcaaa aaaagatttt agaagtgcaa tatttatagt gttatttgtt 1680 tcaccttcaa gcctttgccc tgaggtgtta caatcttgtc ttgcgttttc taaatcaatg 1740 cttaataaaa tattt 1755 38 524 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 697785CB1 38 cccacgcgtc cggtggagtc ttctgacagc tggtgcgcct gcccgggaac atcctcctgg 60 actcaatcat ggcttgtggt ctggtcgcca gcaacctgaa tctcaaacct ggagagtgcc 120 ttcgagtgcg aggcgaggtg gctcctgacg ctaagagctt cgtgctgaac ctgggcaaag 180 acagcaacaa cctgtgcctg cacttcaacc ctcgcttcaa cgcccacggc gacgccaaca 240 ccatcgtgtg caacagcaag gacggcgggg cctgggggac cgagcagcgg gaggctgtct 300 ttcccttcca gcctggaagt gttgcagagg tgtgcatcac cttcgaccag gccaacctga 360 ccgtcaagct gccagatgga tacgaattca agttccccaa ccgcctcaac ctggaggcca 420 tcaactacat ggcagctgac ggtgacttca agatcaaatg tgtggccttt gactgaaatc 480 agccagccca tggcccccaa taaaggcagc tgcctctgct ccct 524 39 1701 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 238469.9 39 ttactccact ttgcagtgag ttctagtata acttctattc cagtgagatc aaatggttaa 60 ggactccaga aaagaaattt ggtgaacaca aagggtttgt catactttaa cttttgtccc 120 tttcccaggt ggcccatgct tctaggccag cctcccaatt cctagcttgc ttcatgctcc 180 tggcctttgc ctactcaaaa caatctgtcc tccccaccct gtcatctctg ttcagagtaa 240 atacctccct ccctctgctt ttgccctaag ttattttttc aactcaccta acatctaact 300 tggctttgca gctctgtttc tccaaaaccc tctctgcctg tttcctccca agctatctat 360 gaccagtgcc agaaaccaga aaatcttctt ggaagttgca ctctttgctt ctcttccctc 420 tcctttatcc ttccacttgg aatctctctc cttctacctg tctctatctg ctgcaatcct 480 gttcatcttt ccaggtacat tcctcacttt ttcatcttta agaagtcctc tcagaaactg 540 cataggattt tttcatgata tatgccatat tccactgtgt aatgtagatt acaccacagg 600 gtttttaatt tcctaaaggc aagagctata acctagtcat cttcctctcc taagtgggga 660 gtatcaccat gatttgacca agtagctatg atatgggtgc tatctccata aatgaatgag 720 cagtgaggaa aaaggagatg attatgagtg aatgaagaat cttaataagg aaagtttatt 780 ccacagtgaa gcagtgttgg tggctccaaa acctctcttt aggaaggatt taggacagca 840 tcctaatcaa aagggcctgg aagcacttta taaaagagag agacaagatc gcatgtcaaa 900 ctagaaggaa ggaggtgaga ggagataggg ctccagagtg gagcaagccc cttctgtccc 960 cttgaacttc ctgccggtgc atgggttacc tctcattaaa tttaatagta cttgttgctt 1020 tggtgtagtg aaatgaatgc cttgatgaaa ttgcattgca ccatttttga aagagagaat 1080 actcaaacgt gtcacttctg tttcttgcaa gcaactgtga tcctgagctg tgcacacttc 1140 tggttgggat tatttctggt ttctacttcc tgtttgaaga tgtggcatgg agagtgctct 1200 gctttgacct gaagtatttt atctatcctc agtctcagga cactgttgat ggaattaagg 1260 ccaagcacat ctgcaaaaaa gacattgctg gaggaggtgc aaagagctgg aaaccaagtc 1320 tccagtcctg ggaaaagcag tggtatggaa aagcaatgga aagagcattt tgaaaatgcc 1380 attccactgt tttctggcct ttatgatttc tgctgagaaa tccactgtta gtctgatggg 1440 gtctccttca tagcaccaat gacctgaaga gccttgttga aggaagactc catctgatga 1500 ctcagagcaa gtatttttta gtgtgttatt gttattagca gaaagagggc cataaaatac 1560 atggggcaag ctgaatatat cttaggcaaa agaagaaaat attcaaattc ttatgttatt 1620 ttatctaatt attttatctc tttttgtgtg tgacttataa tgtgtgtatt gtattaataa 1680 aagtatataa acatgtagtt t 1701 40 496 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 047593.1 40 ccagcaagta ctgagcttta actgtttcca aatggggctt ctgagaggca ctgagttggc 60 atctaccaag gacttggtct acacatagag ggaagacaga gaccaggaaa cactcatctt 120 tctgcaattc aactctgggc tccatcttga aggaaatgaa tgcatgaaga acattcttaa 180 cctagtatgt ctacggccat accaccctag gcgtgcccaa tctcgtctga acccagtacg 240 tgacatgccc tatgctgatg ctttcatatg cgttacctta tttaatcctc atgacttcca 300 cattaataat aattacctat gatgtgagag ggtcattata ccaattttat gaagaaaata 360 tggctcaaag aaataatttt taagtagcaa caccaacatt tggaatcttc ttgaaacttc 420 taactcctag aagaccacca tgctgtattt ttggtctaca aatttaaatg gaatagtatc 480 taatgttggg gaaaac 496 41 981 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 406006.1 41 ggccaaagag gagagaatag taaacttagt cttaccccca actgttcttc aactttgaac 60 attacacaaa gccaaataca ttttctaagt ccagattctt ttgtaaataa tagtcatgga 120 gctaataatg aactagaatt agtaacatgt ctttcatcag agatgtttat gaaagataat 180 tcacagcctg tgcatttgga atcaacaatt gcacatgaaa tttatcagaa aattttaagt 240 ccagattctt tcataaaaga taattatgga ctaaatcagg atctagaatc agagtcagtt 300 aatcctattt tatcccctaa tcaattttta aaagataaca tggcatatat gtgtacatct 360 cagcaaacat gtaaagtacc attatcaaat gaaaattctc aagtcccaca gtctcctgaa 420 gattggagaa aaagtgaagt ttcgccacgt attcctgaat gtcagggttc aaaatctccc 480 aaagctattt ttgaagaact agtagaaatg aagtcaaatt actacagttt tataaaacaa 540 aataatccta aattttctgc agttcaggat atttctagtc atagccacaa taaacaacct 600 aagagacgtc caatactttc tgccactgtt actaaaagga aggccacctg taccagagaa 660 aaccaaactg agattaataa accaaaagca aaaagatgtc tcaacagtgc agtgggtgaa 720 catgaaaaag taataaataa tcaaaaggaa aaagaagatt ttcattctta tcttccaatt 780 atagatccaa tattaagtaa atctaagagt tataaaaacg aggtaacacc ctcttcgaca 840 acagcttcag ttgctcggaa aagaaagagc gatggaagca tggaagatgc aaatgtgaga 900 gttgcaatta cagaacatac agaagtgcga gaaatcaaaa gaatccattt ttctccctca 960 gagcctaaaa catcagctgt t 981 42 1523 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 217973.1 42 ctgaagagtc atggtggggc ccgggcctac cgctgctgcc gctgtcgaag agcggcagag 60 aaagcttcag gagtaccttg cagccaaggg aaaactgaag agccaaaaca ccaagcctta 120 tctaaaatcc aagaataatt gccagaatca accaccttct aaatctacta ttagacccaa 180 aaatgatgtt accaaccatg ttgttttgcc tgtcaaacct aaaaggtcca tcagcattaa 240 actccagccc agaccaccta atactgcagg gtcccagaag ccgaagttgg agccaccaaa 300 acttctgggc aaaaggctga cttcagaatg tgtttcttct aacccatact ctaagccttc 360 tagcaagagt tttcaacagt gtgaagctgg atcgtccaca acaggagaac tgtcaagaaa 420 acctgtgggg tcacttaata tagagcaatt gaaaactaca aagcagcagt taacagatca 480 aggaaatggt aaatgtatag actttatgaa taatatccat gttgaaaacg aatctttgga 540 taactttcta aaagaaacaa acaaagagaa cttgctcgat atcttaacag aacctgagag 600 gaagccagat cctaaattat ataccagaag taagccaaag actgactctt ataatcaaac 660 caagaacagt ttagttccta aacaagcctt gggcaaaagt tcagttaata gtgctgttct 720 gaaagatagg gttaataaac aatttgttgg agaaacacaa agcaggactt tcccagtaaa 780 atcacagcaa ctctctagag gagcagatct tgcaagacca ggagtaaaac cctcaaggac 840 ggttccctct cactttattc ggacccttag taaagttcag tcatcaaaga aaccagtagt 900 caagaacatc aaagatataa aggttaatag gagtcaatat gaaagaccaa atgaaactaa 960 gatacggtca taccctgtta ctgaacagag agtgaagcac accaaaccca gaacataccc 1020 cagtttgctt cagggtgaat ataacaacag acatccaaac atcaagcaag atcagaagtc 1080 cagccaagtt tgtatacctc agacatcatg tgtactgcaa aagtcaaaag ccgtaagcca 1140 gaggcctaat ttgacagttg gcagatttaa ttcagccatt ccaagcaccc ctagcataag 1200 accaaatgga accagtggta ataaacataa caataatggc tttcagcaaa aagcacagac 1260 tttggactcc aagttgaaaa aggctgttcc ccagaaccat tttctgaaca agacagctcc 1320 caaaactcaa gctgatgtca caaccgtaaa tgggacccaa acaaacccaa atattaaaaa 1380 gaaggcaaca gcagaggatc gaaggaaaca actagaagaa tggcagaaat ctaagggaaa 1440 aacctataaa cggcctccta tggaacttaa aacaaaaaga aaagtaataa aggaaatgaa 1500 tatttcattc tggaagagca ttg 1523 43 431 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 334430.1 43 cgagtagtat acattcactt tgttttatat agctgattcc ctactggtta atatttaaat 60 tgactcctgt ttttactatt ataaataatg ctgtactcaa catctttaaa tgcttatttt 120 ttcatactaa attattagaa gtttgatttg ttggaacacc tgtctatgtt aagttgataa 180 gagtaaatgc tgggtgcatt atttatttgt tttagcaaga aagatatttt ttcattttct 240 gcattcctca ataaagcatg aagatgctac cttagacatc tgatatggta tccaagtcaa 300 ataaggtcag gtaccagtgt ggttccaaga atttctctga gagccatgta gcctggccag 360 ggaaactaac tggcaaagat ggcatgtatc taccctggct tttcactaaa ataaagtata 420 ggattaagaa a 431 44 1834 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 237113.1 44 cgcccctgag gtggctgatt gctgctggcg cctctccgct ttgcggctgg agtccgggtt 60 ccctggggtt ccgcgcgggg ggcggccagc ggtcctccca ccaccctcct cagcccgggg 120 cgcgtgtctg tgtctgtgcg tgtccgtgtg tccccgtgcg ccctccaccc ggccggcccc 180 ggctctcccc aggtcgcgcc aggcagggcc cccttcgcgg cgggcccgcg cgggtccctt 240 ccacagcaag gccacgcggt ccccctagcc tctcccgagt cccagctgcg gcgtgggcgc 300 gttcccatcg ggactcgtgg acgcgtcctg ctcccagctg cctttcgtct agagaaagtt 360 cgtgttcatc ttgtgggacg ttttcagtta ctgcttggga acagtgtttt aaaaccagcg 420 agagatcaag acgggctaca gctgtttccg tgattttcag cgatctgatt tttgctttga 480 tgccttgtga cccacttagt gtgcacgact catcctcaaa ctataccact actggatgcc 540 aacgattttt gacatttacc caggctcttt gttttattgt agggaaaagc gtttcatttg 600 aatttcctcc gagggagaag tagagacaaa gttgaaagag gctttatagc agctggtagc 660 tggcattagt ttctgtctgg actagaggca ctctgacatc aatttggaaa ttggaattaa 720 gaaaatacgt ttttaaaatc gtaatactta tcagatttca ctaatattta aacacatgag 780 gactgtgtat cacattcacc gattgttttg tcgacgtaat gtttacatct gtggtgctaa 840 tgataagcag aaccttgcca gggacgtttg acgtggtgtg gccactttac gttttcaagt 900 ctatgagaat gtctgcgcgg agacagcata gctctgtaga aatgagtggc agcgtatgta 960 acctggcatt ttgaacccag gagcacaatt ttattaaagg aaaataaacc tactttctca 1020 ttgataacac tgttttttag ttttatggtg aactgttcgg aagtaatttt caacaagtgc 1080 ttattttata aatattagac cgtgtacccc taggattgtg tattttttaa gaaaactggt 1140 ccatagaagc ggtgcaaaag ttttaaactc atctgcctcg gatcctcctc ctctgagcag 1200 atgctcaatt aaactttttc tagtatctta ataattggag gtattaatag atgttttatt 1260 tttgagatac atattgtaca ttttagatct tttttttttt ctaaagtagg gatccaaaat 1320 tgaggtgaaa tatatttgct tacatggcaa gactttttaa aagtagaatt tctgtaattg 1380 aagaccatcc ttttttgtgt gtgaatagaa tggttgcggt ttctcttggg atcattgatt 1440 agtgaattac gatttggtta agatagaatg cgtttttagg aagttggagg tttgactaat 1500 cgctgtgtta gcatatgagt aacaaatttg aagaagatac aagcattttt atggctgacg 1560 tttctaatca gataatttta tttttaagct tgctctgttt tacttttgtt aagtgaacat 1620 tttaacatgt tttaaagctc tttgataatt ataagggaga atttccttat gaaaatattt 1680 ttgctttaat tttagagaca caagaagtca aggaattcag ttaataacac tttcacttaa 1740 tcgttaaatt gccttaaaat tgcatgcata gtatattgta attcacattt tctgtatgta 1800 agattggcag ttaagaatag tattctggcc gggc 1834 45 957 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 006529.1 45 tacttgtcgt gtgtcaacag gtgtattttg ctaaatgtcg gggacacatt ccaagaggct 60 aaaagcaaat ttctgtacat taggagattt gtgagtcctt aggaaaggct cagaagaggg 120 ctccacgtag cacaatacct gacatagaaa gtggtcagtg tctgcagaat gagtcggcat 180 gaaccgtact ttccttggca gggttattag gtggtaaata cctgcagaat aatgggattg 240 tactagggtt tcttctggct ttagaaaccc atttgtttac taatagattc ccagaggata 300 ccttgatctc accaagctat ttgccagaat gtctcctgat ggcctcattg aagaaagggg 360 gactatgagc cagatgctgg tgccctgaag atttgtagtt tgtgggatag tcttaacttg 420 gcagggtttg attaacagaa tgaagtctgt tccttagagg gaagtctttg cttgctgccc 480 tgacctgctg gacactgtta attgggatga ggtcaaagaa ggcatagtta ccacatttgc 540 aggagaccct aacctggaaa tagtaaatta cataacattc tttcaagtgt ctcctctttt 600 aaaaaagtat tttgatatag tttcacacag agaaaacttg caagaactct tgtatatcct 660 ttacccagat tctccaactg tcaatacttt gtcccattta ctatttgctt tagacatttt 720 gagatttgtt tttgaaccat ttgaggaaaa catcctaccc ttctacccat aagtactttt 780 tcagtgtgta catcttaaga atcaggactt tctcttccat aaccacagtc catcagatgc 840 aggaaataag acaataatac aatactatga cttagcccac agttcatgtt caaatcttac 900 cgatcaccat gcctctttgg tcttgcttaa tctgaaacag tcagatttta ttggact 957 46 543 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 006529.2 46 ggggcccnng atgtgggact gcnctttccn tgctgctgnt aacttttnnc agttaaggtn 60 gtgttttccg cattgtgaag atactgtttt tccttntaat aagtaatttc tggagggata 120 ctttgaaact aagtatcctg ttcctnatca anctttcacc tactagtttc agcctcaatt 180 gatgattntt gctgaatcaa ttaccaagat ggttgcaaaa tggtgatttt gcaacattat 240 cgtttcttct aattattggc atgctcttat aaggcagagt ttgttttctc gaccttagaa 300 gttttgtgtt catttagtta ttggcataga ctcaagagtc ttgtgttcta tgtggagtct 360 gttactgtga ttccttgtga tgtccagatt gtatgtattt ggccaatctt gagttccttc 420 aggaaacctc ctggatccca tcattttaag ggtgcttcct tactttctag catgagatat 480 tccaggccta ccttgtactt tccctgctgc agccctggag tcagtctttt gttgtggttt 540 tgc 543 47 1428 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 980793.1 47 aactgtcaaa tctgaccaga gacgtcccca tctttgtgtg tgccatggcc ttccccacgg 60 tcccatgtcc actccacgtt tttgagcccc gctatcggct tatgataaga agatgcatgg 120 aaactggcac caagcggttt ggcatgtgtt tatctgctga gcacgcgggg ctttcagagt 180 atggatgcat gctggagatt aaggacgtga gaacgtttcc tgatggaagt tctgttgtag 240 acgcgattgg catcagtcgg ttccgagtgc taagccaccg ccacagagat ggctataaca 300 cagcggacat tgaatatctt gaagatgaaa aggtggaggg tccagagtat gaagaacttg 360 ccgctctcca cgattctgtg catcaacagt ctgtttcctg gttcgcgtct ctccaggatc 420 gcatgaaaga acaaatttta agtcattttg gggtaatgcc agacagagaa cctgagcctc 480 agagtaatcc cagcggtccc tgcctggtcc tggtggatcc tggccgtgct gcccctggag 540 cgcaaggctc agctggccat cctcggcatg acctcgctca aagagcggct ccttgtccat 600 ccgacggata ttagtcatca tcatcgctgt aacgatgaag tagtcggtca agtagctggt 660 ctaactgcca gggagagaaa taattgattt ttctctctgt caaggtttct ggcagccctt 720 gtgcttttat aaatgtcagg catggacgaa tagccgtcca ttcattgtgc ttcatcaagt 780 gcttgtggat gaggttccaa aatgggacgc ttgccaaaca ttgagtcctc ctcaaaaatg 840 acaattctgt gtctggtggg atctgacctt gtgtgaggtt agcctgaagt ctgaatggag 900 cccatagttg gaaaacaacc taagaaaatc tcttagaagc aggtgcttgg ggaatgcagt 960 tcactgacag cacaggaccc tgcagatggt ttacatgtgg tttgggtttc acgagaaaga 1020 aggattcact tcccagtcag catctggctc tgccagatgg taaaggcgtg ctttagtgtg 1080 tagacaatat gggggaacca cgtttttatc tggaagtgga tttcttagaa cacaggctaa 1140 ccaaaactac gcttaggctt tgcgtgttgc tgtgaagttg tctgtgaaat cgaataatca 1200 caccattgtt cagtgcagga gcccaaacta gtccttaccc aagaagtagt agcctctgga 1260 tagaactgtg tttaatgtcc tgttgtagtc ccaggtgttg taaattgcat gttgtaatca 1320 aacgaatgtc aaaacataag aaagtatacc ttggatatag aaaaacctga gaacagtatc 1380 attcacttga ggatatatat atatatattt acacacaata aagtgagt 1428 48 935 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 158822.1 48 tcgaccatgt atttgagaag ttgaagtcag taagtgaatc aaaagatatt aagcatttat 60 taattatttt tctgtgccac aaagggacag aatttttaga attgctggag aaaggcagaa 120 gacaagactg taaaggtaaa tatgaaccaa attgtgaaag gactgtagga tttcatggta 180 ggaatagatt accaacagca gagtgggaga agtaggtaag tatgggcatg atgaaggcga 240 ccctaggcag gctaggataa aactctatgt aatcattatt ttatgtaact acctgaaaaa 300 aaaaataagg ctttagtttg gatgcagggt ggtggtatgc tcttattttc aaattaaaag 360 taagatacag acttttacta agcagaaaga tgattataat ttggaagaac ctgataactt 420 tcactatccg tggcagcctg gtttactgta gagagcttaa aaaatcttga tgtaggtgac 480 atccttttct tacttatcat ctaaggttgt cttcctgttt acctattata actgtcccct 540 cctgttccag tctcattcat tttctagttt ggtgactcct tgctctgttc tcacttcctc 600 catcctccgt gtttgatccc tttagatatc ctttttttaa gcttacttgc ctgagacact 660 ttacatacac attgcacatc tttttcccct aatatcttac tcctttcccc ttttgatttt 720 ggtagctact gtagttctgc ctaagagata atctttttct ctgggctttc aagggaatgc 780 gcattcgact gttggtctac tgtgatcttt ctactcccat tcctgctaga ggaagggatt 840 tagcactagt gacaagcata gaggctgtga taaaagtctc taatagaaag ctcgttttca 900 ttacttcttt ctgtatatca tagtgattta aaaat 935 49 369 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 069200.1 49 aagagtctcc agcgtactaa cagggctatt tgtagaaggc aaaacacatt gtgtgatacc 60 atccacagca tctttatatg ggtaaaatca cgtttaaata aatataaaag caacccagag 120 cacaaaggtt ataaatagca actcaaggag gctgaagtac caagggaccc atttgtcata 180 tggatgtctt tgtgtgggaa cagcctagga ctaacagctg tttctggact agctcatcaa 240 aattatttcc tcggagtgcc tctaaaaaat tactgggtaa acagggagga attgttcgtg 300 tcttcttcaa tctctattta aacactttga aagtagtaac ttcttttttt aaacattgag 360 aaatataac 369 50 729 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 234958.1 50 gaaaaagttg gcaacctgtg aaacggttga cttttggctg aaggtgggag ccggtgtggg 60 agcttttact gccgttttgc tggtggctct gacctgctac ttctggaaaa agaatcaaaa 120 gaaaaagaag accattttga atctgttcaa ctgaaaacct caagatcccc aaatatatga 180 agagacagtg ctgtagcctt gagactaatg aacaaagaaa cctgctctag ttttacagga 240 ccatatttta gggtctgtcc tcatacctgt cacattggtg atctcacaga ggagggccat 300 gccgctgaaa agggaaggag attgaaacat ttgattgcct tatcacatgg tcaagtacct 360 tgccaaataa aggaaagcaa atgatttggg tctcaactga agatgaagct caactcagga 420 agagatttat ctgtatatac acataactga aaaccaagtt taagcccacc aatgcactgc 480 tgatgcatgc catataatta atgggtaact tttattcttt atgatgtcta cataacaagt 540 gtgatttgga aggcacatgt gagcatatgc attatgatcc aatttatgtt ttttctttgt 600 ttatattttg gggaaaatta aaattttttt aaggtatatt tttcccatta tttattttcc 660 tgaccttaaa acagcttttc tactaaaaaa tggtgagcaa tgaagacaat aaatttttca 720 tttttccat 729 51 569 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 350411.11 51 atgtttctgg atattgatat ttgtgggact aatgaatttg atatgaatga gatttcacat 60 aggaggccta gagtaagagt tttctcatag acaggctctg tggttaccgt ggtaggaaag 120 ctttgcctgt aaaggacttt gatacctaaa aagtaatggt aaaaatgatt tcgtctggat 180 ataatcctca ataaaggatt tctgaaatat gtgcatggtt cctaacctaa acactctact 240 atctctttaa taggattgac ttggatgcat tcttttaggc taggtctaat attggttatt 300 ttgtgtaaat gatattagta gaattttaaa gggtagtatg agatggtaaa tgtaaaatat 360 ttgaaattaa aagttttgca caaatgcaat gtaattattg ttgcttctgt tgttagtatt 420 atatacccac cataaagacc aatacatttg agaaataaaa gtaaactcta tgaaatttat 480 tcctggtaat cacagatagc aacaacgaaa gttcacagtg aaggatattt gagagaggac 540 attattatga aaagctgttg atttatttt 569 52 5653 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 1383759.1 52 cttcctgttt ctcaccattc ggcttatttg ttttccctcc tcttaggatt gccccctgtg 60 ggtcactttc tcagtcattt tgagctcagc ctaatcaaag actgaggtta tgaagtcgat 120 cctagatggc cttgcagata ccaccttccg caccatcacc actgacctcc tgtacgtggg 180 ctcaaatgac attcagtacg aagacatcaa aggtgacatg gcatccaaat tagggtactt 240 cccacagaaa ttccctttaa cttcctttag gggaagtccc ttccaagaga agatgactgc 300 gggagacaac ccccagctag tcccagcaga ccaggtgaac attacagaat tttacaacaa 360 gtctctctcg tccttcaagg agaatgagga gaacatccag tgtggggaga acttcatgga 420 catagagtgt ttcatggtcc tgaaccccag ccagcagctg gccattgcag tcctgtccct 480 cacgctgggc accttcacgg tcctggagaa cctcctggtg ctgtgcgtca tcctccactc 540 ccgcagcctc cgctgcaggc cttcctacca cttcatcggc agcctggcgg tggcagacct 600 cctggggagt gtcatttttg tctacagctt cattgacttc cacgtgttcc accgcaaaga 660 tagccgcaac gtgtttctgt tcaaactggg tggggtcacg gcctccttca ctgcctccgt 720 gggcagcctg ttcctcacag ccatcgacag gtacatatcc attcacaggc ccctggccta 780 taagaggatt gtcaccaggc ccaaggccgt ggtggcgttt tgcctgatgt ggaccatagc 840 cattgtgatc gccgtgctgc ctctcctggg ctggaactgc gagaaactgc aatctgtttg 900 ctcagacatt ttcccacaca ttgatgaaac ctacctgatg ttctggatcg gggtcaccag 960 cgtactgctt ctgttcatcg tgtatgcgta catgtatatt ctctggaagg ctcacagcca 1020 cgccgtccgc atgattcagc gtggcaccca gaagagcatc atcatccaca cgtctgagga 1080 tgggaaggta caggtgaccc ggccagacca agcccgcatg gacattaggt tagccaagac 1140 cctggtcctg atcctggtgg tgttgatcat ctgctggggc cctctgcttg caatcatggt 1200 gtatgatgtc tttgggaaga tgaacaagct cattaagacg gtgtttgcat tctgcagtat 1260 gctctgcctg ctgaactcca ccgtgaaccc catcatctat gctctgagga gtaaggacct 1320 gcgacacgct ttccggagca tgtttccctc ttgtgaaggc actgcgcagc ctctggataa 1380 cagcatgggg gactcggact gcctgcacaa acacgcaaac aatgcagcca gtgttcacag 1440 ggccgcagaa agctgcatca agagcacggt caagattgcc aaggtaacca tgtctgtgtc 1500 cacagacacg tctgccgagg ctctgtgagc ctgatgcctc cctggcagca caggaaaaga 1560 attttttttt ttaagctcaa aatctagaag agtctattgt ctccttggtt atattttttt 1620 aactttacca tgctcaatga aaaggtgatt gtcaccatga tcacttatca gtttgctaat 1680 gtttccatag tttaggtact caaactccat tctccagggg tttacagtga agaaagcctg 1740 ttgtttaagt gactgaacga tccttcaaag tctcaatgaa ataggaggga aacctttggc 1800 tacacaattg gaagtctaag aacccatgga aaaatgccat caaatgaata atgcctttgt 1860 aaccacaact ttcactataa tgtgaaatgt aactgtccgt agtatcagag atgtccattt 1920 ttacaagtta tagtactaga gatattttgt aaaatgtatt atgtcctgtg agatgtgtat 1980 cagtgtttat gtgctattaa tatttgttta gttcagcaaa actgaaaggt agacttttat 2040 gagaacaatg gacaagcagt ggatacgtgt caatgtgtgc actttttttc tatattattg 2100 cccatgatat aactttagaa ataaacctta atatttcttc aaatatctct atttaatttt 2160 gacactgaaa taaccgtaaa ggtttatttt tctgttacct caacaagaag aatttgaaga 2220 cttcaaaata ttgagcagaa ttcattcata cttaaaaatt tattagccct gcattttcat 2280 aggaagacac attatcttct ggactatagc tgttctaatg gattataatc agaatggaag 2340 agagaaagca tattgacttt ttttgagcga catctctgac tttctttagt ctttagctat 2400 tactggatct cttaagacag catgtgttaa tcttaatgta tatcgttatc actgtgcagt 2460 tgctgtttac ttgaatagta ttgtgttcct atattccagg tttaagtaga tttcatgcct 2520 gggtggccaa acaacagtct tcattttttt taattgaaaa gaagtagtgt ctggatcagt 2580 aaaattatac tgtgtgtgag tgtgaatata aatgtgtgta tgtgtgtttc tgtcctgtaa 2640 ctgttacagt aatgtcataa agtgagaaaa ctgtgaccaa gtataaactt ttaccacttg 2700 ctgcactctt gcacatggat tcagtttcta aaattgagtt cttcctgtaa tcttgttgat 2760 aaaaatactg actccaacca ttcaaaaatt tcaccccatc cctccttaag agattggatc 2820 aagtattact aaattgacct ttaggtatta cacaagacca gtgcttagca aaaaataatg 2880 acaggcatcc aaggaaggga tgtatttgta gtgttattgc caggaaagga gagtactttg 2940 gtttctgagc accgaatatt gagcaatatg tcagtcacta aaaggaagac agttctacag 3000 aaaaacaatg gtaacatttt tcaatagcgt gtgtagatag tatgcactat atacatcacg 3060 ttaaagtagg actatcacac ccagcccatg tggctaaaaa agctgaatca gacagtggat 3120 gagacacaca acggcagtga agaaccgata cacttggcat tgacgtctag ctatgctgta 3180 tctgtgcttt gcccacatgc ccttggtgac agctgagcac ccagctctgt cttggtaggt 3240 ttgggctaag gaacaaatct ctcctttgct cgtggttagc aagatacact caagcatgaa 3300 gataaacaca gctgctttct tcttacaccc cggtctcatg ctccttaatg gcgccatggg 3360 tgcttgttgg gcctttttcc agtaaggaat gatattgctg aagaatctac ttaaccctga 3420 caaattttaa ttataatctc ttcttataca gataaaacat gactcctaca aggccccaag 3480 gtttacatag tctgaagtga agtacagagc tggcatctat ctggtgattt ctagctctcg 3540 agatacccaa gcagcctgat ggggcagttc cccttcttac ggttcacgct ctaaggcagg 3600 atgtggctta tgagatactt tgcattgtct gtctgcacac cttgaatctg cctgctggct 3660 cccttacttt acctctctgt catgtgcaga tgaaggctca gggtgctaga ggattagtaa 3720 gatctctttc taaagacagg agagattatt tacaagaaga actcaccagg gtttagtttg 3780 catttaagaa ttgccagtct tttgtcctgc atcatcttga acattaatcc acatgtttca 3840 gagctcacca ggcagtacca atgctctttt cacagctatg aagagctaga gaaattcttg 3900 ttatggtaga aaaatttcac ggttcatttt tgaaactgca tttgtgcgta tgcagtgtag 3960 attttatagt gtgttgtgct ttcaagatct aaatcatata taataaatta agggacaatg 4020 gggctgacag cactaaactt ggtgcttatt gatattctaa gaaatatctg tgaaatatca 4080 tcacgtatgt tatacaacct tcatttaaaa aggtttaaaa ctagttagat tcactttgac 4140 acttttcata tcatttctta acccaagtga cgaaaacatt gtccccaatg aatatactca 4200 ttagaattac catttgttaa tatcactcat taattaaccc cataattaga tccattaatt 4260 taaatgattt aaatttaagt aagttttata aggtctgaca tcagaggtat cttactttcc 4320 tctgaggatg atgtacttgc cctgaccatg cattttacca tcacacatgt tcagaaaggg 4380 ccaaattccc aacctgctca tttttttttt tatcagagtc atgatgaatc agtcctagaa 4440 tgtttcattt gcacaagtag ggctgcctcc aagaggaacc tctgatttat tttgtatgaa 4500 atatatgtga aaggatatga atctgagaga tgctgtagac atctgtccta cacttgagat 4560 gatttccaag cctctctggc actttgagtt aagtctatct ggtattaaat gccaaggacc 4620 ttttgctgcc taaatccact ctgcaggaaa taggcccaac caccagatga gaattaggcc 4680 ctggatgagt agcgctatag ttactgtcct gttgattaat ttctgccatt tcatgtccat 4740 aaaagagacc acccatatca tgcacacaat tagatttctc acactctaac tgtatatttg 4800 tatgatattt taaaatctcc taaatgctgg gcaatggcta ttaacaatta attgtcttgc 4860 actggccttc tgatgaaatg ttaacaatgc ctattgtaat atagaaaaaa acattctatc 4920 tactgatttg ggctgaatgt atgtaaatag gtttctaaaa agtcagatgt ttgagcagtg 4980 gcctacaaat cagtaatttt cggatgggag agtttcttta cattgccgtg gcatcttaaa 5040 agctatcttc atgtaaattg actgtactag gcctactggg gatcagagtt cccaagaaag 5100 gaaacctttt cttgtatctg gattcaaatt tatttccaat gtttcaagcg ggaaacatga 5160 ctctttattg tctgtaaatc taacattatt acttttcctc ttagaagaat attgtattgt 5220 tagatgtttg ttgagctggt aacatcgttg caaccactgc aatatcttcg ttagtaatct 5280 gtataatact ttgtatacaa gtactggtaa gattgttatt aaatgtagct tcagtcatta 5340 aattactata gcaaagtagt acttcttctg taatatttac aatgtattaa gcccacagta 5400 tattttattt caatgtaatt aaactgttaa cttattcaaa gagaaaacat ctcatcatgt 5460 ctattgtcca aagttacctg gaatcaaata aaaattctag attaccatga agaacataaa 5520 atgcctttga actctgcctt atttcacagt ctgatggcaa aatactaagg atttaatttc 5580 taaaagattg ctgaactaat ttattcctca aaaagcacta atgactactt gaaaagtggg 5640 gacatattgg att 5653 53 4526 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 237135.1 53 tgggggcgtc ctccttcgtc cccgcccggc tgtcaagctg tgttctagcg gccgagggac 60 cgaggggggc taagaaaggg ggcgcccagc catgcagagg caaaaaggcg ctgcggaacg 120 gggtccccgt cgccagtgct gaggcaggag gtcggagcca caagtgaggg gctgggaagc 180 aggacccagc acgggcgtct tggcaggcgg ccgggcgcag ggccaggctg ctggggacgc 240 tcagggcttt ccacccaagc catgggcgct gtcgggcact cgggggtccc ctcgtggctc 300 cggccactcg gcgtgggcat tacgttggct tcacatcgcc atccagcctc gaagccaaca 360 ggactgaaaa atagcttcgg ccaaacgttc tcctcccgct aaggagaggg gtcgagtgcg 420 tcagcccgag gggactggag agggatgccc tagccctcga ggggcggagg acccgcggtt 480 gaaggaggca gcgggagcgg agagcgccct ccttgaccat cgaatgcctc cttctgtgtt 540 tccattcctg tcgagtgggc tgggccacgc tgaccaccct ggaggaggga cggacgacgc 600 tcggcgggct ctgaccgtgc cgccttcttg tggctgctga ctgggatcca ggagggagtg 660 ggcatggggc gcagccgcgc ctccctccct ccccgcctcc cgggcgccgg ggttggcgat 720 gtggagacgt gaggggaccc gtcggctgct ccggcttctc caggactccg ccaggcgccc 780 gcgcgtccct cctcacccgg aggaggagag gctccgcgcg gggctccgag gcgggcggcg 840 cgcggagccg gagtcccagc ctcgccatgg gacataacgg gagctggatc tctccaaatg 900 ccagcgagcc gcacaacgcg tccggcgccg aggctgcggg tgtgaaccgc agcgcgctcg 960 gggagttcgg cgaggcgcag ctgtaccgcc agttcaccac caccgtgcag gtcgtcatct 1020 tcataggctc gctgctcgga aacttcatgg tgttatggtc aacttgccgc acaaccgtgt 1080 tcaaatctgt caccaacagg ttcattaaaa acctggcctg ctcggggatt tgtgccagcc 1140 tggtctgtgt gcccttcgac atcatcctca gcaccagtcc tcactgttgc tggtggatct 1200 acaccatgct cttctgcaag gtcgtcaaat ttttgcacaa agtattctgc tctgtgacca 1260 tcctcagctt ccctgctatt gctttggaca ggtactactc agtcctctat ccactggaga 1320 ggaaaatatc tgatgccaag tcccgtgaac tggtgatgta catctgggcc catgcagtgg 1380 tggccagtgt ccctgtgttt gcagtaacca atgtggctga catctatgcc acgtccacct 1440 gcacggaagt ctggagcaac tccttgggcc acctggtgta cgttctggtg tataacatca 1500 ccacggtcat tgtgcctgtg gtggtggtgt tcctcttctt gatactgatc cgacgggccc 1560 tgagtgccag ccagaagaag aaggtcatca tagcagcgct ccggacccca cagaacacca 1620 tctctattcc ctatgcctcc cagcgggagg ccgagctgca cgccaccctg ctctccatgg 1680 tgatggtctt catcttgtgt agcgtgccct atgccaccct ggtcgtctac cagactgtgc 1740 tcaatgtccc tgacacttcc gtcttcttgc tgctcactgc tgtttggctg cccaaagtct 1800 ccctgctggc aaaccctgtt ctctttctta ctgtgaacaa atctgtccgc aagtgcttga 1860 tagggaccct ggtgcaacta caccaccggt acagtcgccg taatgtggtc agtacaggga 1920 gtggcatggc tgaggccagc ctggaaccca gcatacgctc gggtagccag ctcctggaga 1980 tgttccacat tgggcagcag cagatcttta agcccacaga ggatgaggaa gagagtgagg 2040 ccaagtacat tggctcagct gacttccagg ccaaggagat atttagcacc tgcctggagg 2100 gagagcaggg gccacagttt gcgccctctg ccccacccct gagcacagtg gactctgtat 2160 cccaggtggc accggcagcc cctgtggaac ctgaaacatt ccctgataag tattccctgc 2220 agtttggctt tgggcctttt gagttgcctc ctcagtggct ctcagagacc cgaaacagca 2280 agaagcggct gcttcccccc ttgggcaaca ccccagaaga gctgatccag acaaaggtgc 2340 ccaaggtagg cagggtggag cggaagatga gcagaaacaa taaagtgagc atttttccaa 2400 aggtggattc ctagcaagga ttgtaaattc ttggaagcaa cggggagctt ccatattccc 2460 accagagtgt gggaatgctg tggccatgtg attgtatgat ctccttgcaa ctcagtgtga 2520 gttgattcct ccaatatggg ccagatgctt ttgaatgata gggaaatcta cataaaatcc 2580 agtgtcctct ttattgaggg agtatatgta tccatctcag tgatccatgt ccttagtgaa 2640 gtccacatta ttctctgtgg ggacaagagc tgggcagttt tgaatgggtc ttgaggtggg 2700 taccccatgt gcactttctg aggatgcctc acttccctgg gctctgcaga gaacacacag 2760 agagaagact ttcagagctc acaggagcag ggagcaggag cactctaagg gaattccaag 2820 atcatgatgg agcatggtgg ctccagagaa aatgcctgtt tgatgaactt aaacatgtca 2880 aacattttct gttgagaagg tagggatttg gcgtcttaca ctgtttctct ggaagcccca 2940 gtcatatgac tcactgtttc tcctgatacc cttcgtccct ttcattggga tgtaggtaag 3000 gaatgacgat tcctcaccta tggtacacat ggcgatagat gtgcccggga gtaagggaga 3060 tattttgtcc ttgataattc tgattttccc ttggcatcac caacgcctca gagagataca 3120 cctgcaccct ccagtcaggg tcagtgttgg ctggaaaaca ctgaaaagtc ttcgctctgt 3180 ctttcacctt aaattgtgtt ttctcaacaa atgagagaga agcttacggg ggagatgcct 3240 gagagatgcc tatggcgctg tagttttttt ttcttcccta tgatctcaca tgaaaggtgc 3300 tatgtaacaa ccagtatgag tcaaatatat tgaaaaaatc atcttatgca aactttagga 3360 attaaaaggt atttttaaaa tggagagtta gtgtaagctg ggtcctttgg aaacatcaaa 3420 ctgaaaaggc ctgatttgga aaggtgactc tgcccaaaag gttggcaaga atctgacaaa 3480 gatggtttcc ttccgaggaa gactccggaa ctcaggtgtg gccagtctcc ttttcagtct 3540 gtttgtacag ctgcggttct ctcttaattt tggacacaga ggaggaacag aacagggaga 3600 aataatcatt gtagagtgcc aaggcaacat ctgacccaga tgagctcttc acttcctcct 3660 tccctgtcgt tgtagagcca gactgggtag aagagggagg gcagtgtcct caactcatca 3720 gcctcacaag caatttggga cccctctggg gtggatttca ccaggttgaa ttagaaccgc 3780 agataatact tccctgttag tgaggacaaa ccaagcgcca gctctgccct tttctctaga 3840 gtgttgtgtt cttgctcttg gtacttacag gagctagtct ggtgccttga gcaagcttga 3900 agggaagtgg gtgtcctcac cagcaaactt ccacatctca actcgtgccc tcttttggcc 3960 acactggccc cgtctcttgg agggagccca gaccctgtag ggagttttgt tttcctttct 4020 tctcttgggt gtggtgtctt gtgtttctga atgtgaaccc aaagacccta cccctggaga 4080 ggaagcacct tcctctttgt gttggtctcc tcatagcact gtttgctcac agcagaaacg 4140 gggctgccac agcctcctgc ggctctgctg ccttctgggc cctgcgtgca tggcatctat 4200 agctccttgc cctgatagtc aatgctgtgg cccttcaagc ttgtctttca aagctttcac 4260 aatcattaca acttttatca aggggaataa taatctctag gaaaattatg tccactttag 4320 gagaatctgt caagtgtagc cactttggtg ttgttctgat aatatactgt atatgtacaa 4380 cttaataaat tttgatgagg cagaatctgg ttgggtatgt ttcttatata tgtttgaagc 4440 agatggctga ctactaacag gtcattgcca ggtgtatttc tatactcttt gaagaataac 4500 attttaataa aaaattgaaa agcaaa 4526 54 3467 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 7694107.3 54 gggggccccg cgaccaccgc tgcttccagc ccggggcggc gcggcgctga ggcggcggcg 60 gcggcggcct gccccctctg cgggaagcgg gcggccccgg ccgcctccgc gagggcacca 120 tggaggtgaa tgcaggaggt gtgattgcct atatcagttc ttccagctca gcctcaagcc 180 ctgcctcttg tcacagtgag ggttctgaga atagtttcca gtcctcctcc tcttctgttc 240 catcttctcc aaatagctct aattctgata ccaatggtaa tcccaagaat ggtgatctcg 300 ccaatattga aggcatcttg aagaatgatc gaatagattg ttctatgaaa acaagcaaat 360 cgagtgcacc tgggatgaca aaaagtcata gtggtgtgac aaaatttagt ggcatggttc 420 tactgtgtaa agtctgtggg gatgtggcgt caggattcca ctatggagtt catgcttgcg 480 aaggctgtaa gggtttcttt cggagaagta ttcaacaaaa catccagtac aagaagtgcc 540 tgaagaatga aaactgttct ataatgagaa tgaataggaa cagatgtcag caatgtcgct 600 tcaaaaagtg tctgtctgtt ggaatgtcaa gagatgctgt tcggtttggt cgtattccta 660 agcgtgaaaa acagaggatg ctaattgaaa tgcaaagtgc aatgaagacc atgatgaaca 720 gccagttcag tggtcacttg caaaatgaca cattagtaga acatcatgaa cagacagcct 780 tgccagccca ggaacagctg cgacccaagc cccaactgga gcaagaaaac atcaaaagct 840 cttctcctcc atcttctgat tttgcaaagg aagaagtgat tggcatggtg accagagctc 900 acaaggatac ctttatgtat aatcaagagc agcaagaaaa ctcagctgag agcatgcagc 960 cccagagagg agaacggatt cccaagaaca tggagcaata taatttaaat catgatcatt 1020 gcggcaatgg gcttagcagc cattttccct gtagtgagag ccagcagcat ctcaatggac 1080 agttcaaagg gaggaatata atgcattacc caaatggtca tgccatttgt attgcaaatg 1140 gacattgtat gaacttctcc aatgcttata ctcaaagagt atgtgataga gttccgatag 1200 atggattttc tcagaatgag aacaagaata gttacctgtg caacactgga ggaagaatgc 1260 atctggtttg tccaatgagt aagtctccat atgtggatcc tcataaatca ggacatgaaa 1320 tctgggaaga attttcgatg agcttcactc cagcagtgaa agaagtggtg gaatttgcaa 1380 agcgtattcc tgggttcaga gatctctctc agcatgacca ggtcaacctt ttaaaggctg 1440 ggacttttga ggttttaatg gtacggttcg catcattatt tgatgcaaag gaacgtactg 1500 tcaccttttt aagtggaaag aaatatagtg tggatgattt acactcaatg ggagcagggg 1560 atctgctaaa ctctatgttt gaatttagtg agaagctaaa tgccctccaa cttagtgatg 1620 aagagatgag tttgtttaca gctgttgtcc tggtatctgc agatcgatct ggaatagaaa 1680 acgtcaactc tgtggaggct ttgcaggaaa ctctcattcg tgcactaagg accttaataa 1740 tgaaaaacca tccaaatgag gcctctattt ttacaaaact gcttctaaag ttgccagatc 1800 ttcgatcttt aaacaacatg cactctgagg agctcttggc ctttaaagtt cacccttaag 1860 gcctttgttt atttaaacat gaactgatgg taactgtaca ttttgtgcta aaatgcatat 1920 ttatatgtgt ataccatatg tggagataga aaagaccttt aagacaataa aagattgtag 1980 gctatctctg taatcatgca atagctgttc ggattgagaa ctcttcagcc atgattagac 2040 gttgactgca tctccctgat agaccaatca gctgtgtcgc acttaaactg gagaagttac 2100 actgaagtat aatcacactg aatgttagac tttttcatct gccaaaacca aaaaccattt 2160 tgatctccct gtggttatca atataacgca caatcacaag tgtatgagga cttagaaatt 2220 aatcctttgt ggtaggagtt ctgttgaatg atggaaatct tattactacc acaagactat 2280 ttgatctggt aattggagac ttcgggattt aggagatctc catgtctgta tttactctac 2340 cactgctaaa gtgtgtggtc ctgggtagtt tacttgcttg cggaaaatga gaattgatgg 2400 tgtccccaat gccccacctc acagagttac taaaaaatgt ctgtaaagca tatttacctc 2460 ttgggagata ggcactatgt aaataaggta aaatttctgt tattacaatt attcataata 2520 atattctttt cttatttcta agcctttctg ggaaatcatt tcagtccaca ccaaccatat 2580 tattcagggt tcctgccata tgtgtggggt atcctactga tacacacgta ttcaaagttt 2640 atgggtacaa caaagacata gtacatgtac ataatatgta tgtgaatata gttaaatata 2700 tttcttcaca atattttaaa ctgtgaagaa ctttatcata caggaaactt aaaacaagag 2760 gtgtcaaaag acccaaatta ggtgcatttt acttgtttat gatggcataa ccattgcttt 2820 aaaatgttta gacagtagaa tattgaattt atgctctatt tttgtttatt taagcaacac 2880 ttaatgtaaa agtgcaacag gcaattgaat ccaaatttca acgacaaaaa aaaaaaacat 2940 gtattttaga gttcatcttt ggcaaaatct ttggttcagg gtactagttg tttaaaagtt 3000 gattcatatt cttaccttgt gctgagaaag gttgccattg ctgcccctta tacacatgct 3060 gcagcttgat gttaaagaat ttttattctt tttgaagaac taattaatgt ttaaagcaac 3120 tgtttaatat gatggcatgt gtgtgtgtgc gtgcgtgtgt atgttctgag tccacttctt 3180 ttttgccaaa ttaacactaa cggggatttt tgtcctttta ggatttattt tataattttg 3240 aaaaatcctc taggtttgtg acctacaggg cttagaaaat gggtataggt ccaaggcctt 3300 tttaatccac atttgctcaa taggtgggac ttgagtttag gttggattat gattcaggca 3360 tcctgggtta tgggtagtta tggagaaaat tgggccaagt tttggggtta tttcatgggt 3420 ggttgtttcc cgttttaccc cgggaaaatg tgcccttttt agttgat 3467 55 2408 DNA Homo sapiens misc_feature Incyte ID No 899317.1 55 cattatgttt attgtcctgt tcaaatccaa gctctttcac acagaattgt acaagcaaag 60 tttgagtaac taatcttggg gtcatattcc aatgtggctc ccattaaagc atttcaaaga 120 gtgctagatt caggctcaca tatgttacag caacaggcta tactctaggg aaagaacaaa 180 acagcttgat aaaaactgtt tccttttaag catatttaga caaatatcta tcctgtattc 240 tctttgccat ctagattgga gccatggctt tggaacagaa ccagtcaaca gattattatt 300 atgaggaaaa tgaaatgaat ggcacttatg actacagtca atatgaactg atctgtatca 360 aagaagatgt cagagaattt gcaaaagttt tcctccctgt attcctcaca atagttttcg 420 tcattggact tgcaggcaat tccatggtag tggcaattta tgcctattac aagaaacaga 480 gaaccaaaac agatgtgtac atcctgaatt tggctgtagc agatttactc cttctattca 540 ctctgccttt ttgggctgtt aatgcagttc atgggtgggt tttagggaaa ataatgtgca 600 aaataacttc agccttgtac acactaaact ttgtctctgg aatgcagttt ctggcttgta 660 tcagcataga cagatatgtg gcagtaacta aagtccccag ccaatcagga gtgggaaaac 720 catgctggat catctgtttc tgtgtctgga tggctgccat cttgctgagc ataccccagc 780 tggtttttta tacagtaaat gacaatgcta ggtgcattcc cattttcccc cgctacctag 840 gaacatcaat gaaagcattg attcaaatgc tagagatctg cattggattt gtagtaccct 900 ttcttattat gggggtgtgc tactttatca cagcaaggac actcatgaag atgccaaaca 960 ttaaaatatc tcgaccccta aaagttctgc tcacagtcgt tatagttttc attgtcactc 1020 aactgcctta taacattgtc aagttctgcc gagccataga catcatctac tccctgatca 1080 ccagctgcaa catgagcaaa cgcatggaca tcgccatcca agtcacagaa agcatcgcac 1140 tctttcacag ctgcctcaac ccaatccttt atgtttttat gggagcatct ttcaaaaact 1200 acgttatgaa agtggccaag aaatatgggt cctggagaag acagagacaa agtgtggagg 1260 agtttccttt tgattctgag ggtcctacag agccaaccag tacttttagc atttaaaggt 1320 aaaactgctc tgccttttgc ttggatacat atgaatgatg ctttcccctc aaataaaaca 1380 tctgcattat tctgaaactc aaatctcaga cgccgtggtt gcaacttata ataaagaatg 1440 ggttggggga agggggagaa ataaaagcca agaagaggaa acaagataat aaatgtacaa 1500 aacatgaaaa ttaaaatgaa caatatagga aaataattgt aacaggcata agtgaataac 1560 actctgctgt aacgaagaag agctttgtgg tgataatttt gtatcttggt tgcagtggtg 1620 cttatacaaa tctacacaag tgataaaatg acagagaact atatacacac attgtaccaa 1680 tttcaatttc ctggttttga cattatagta taattatgta agatggaacc attggggaaa 1740 actgggtgaa gggtacccag gaccactctg taccatcttt gtaacttcct gtgaatttat 1800 aataatttca aaataaaaca agttaaaaaa aaaacccact atgctataag ttaggccatc 1860 taaaacagat tattaaagag gttcatgtta aaaggcattt ataattattt ttaattatct 1920 aagttttaat acaagaacga tttccctgca taattttagt acttgaataa gtatgcagca 1980 gaactccaac tatctttttt cctgtttttt ttaaatttgt aagtaatttt ataaaatcca 2040 cctcctccaa aaaagcaata aaaaaaaaac aaactataat aagcttttct gattcttttc 2100 aaaacattcc tggtaagttc ctaaagacat aatttgcttc tatgatgtca actttcttac 2160 taataccggg ttatcatgac aaatgttagg tttatcatat atagtctagg tgtaatcctc 2220 agactatcat tttcatctgg gttccaattt cttaacttcc taaagaattc atctgtttat 2280 acaagtctac cactgccgat tgactaaaaa atacattatc ccatgcataa aatgtcctat 2340 tttcatttaa acactttatt tttgagtaat aaaaatatgt accccaataa attattgtta 2400 attaaaaa 2408 

What is claimed is:
 1. A combination comprising a plurality of cDNAs wherein cDNAs are SEQ ID NOs:1-55 that-are differentially regulated in an adipose sample and the complements of SEQ ID NOs:1-55.
 2. An isolated cDNA comprising a polynucleotide having a nucleic acid sequence selected from SEQ ID NOs:1, 29, 31, 32, 35, and 39-51.
 3. The combination of claim 1, wherein the cDNAs are SEQ ID NOs:1-3 and 52 that are upregulated in response to PPARγ agonist and the complements of SEQ ID NOs:1-3 and
 52. 4. The combination of claim 1, wherein the cDNAs are SEQ ID NOs:4-25 and 53-54 that are downregulated in response to PPARγ agonist and the complements of SEQ ID NOs:4-25 and 53-54.
 5. The combination of claim 1, wherein the cDNAs are SEQ ID NOs:26-51 that are differentially regulated in response to PPARγ agonist in adipocytes from normal subjects relative to obese subjects and the complements of SEQ ID NOs:26-51.
 6. The combination of claim 1, wherein the sample is from a subject with a disorder selected from diabetes mellitus, obesity, hypertension, atherosclerosis, polycystic ovarian syndrome, and cancers of the breast, prostate, or colon.
 7. The combination of claim 1, wherein the cDNAs are immobilized on a substrate.
 8. A method for detecting differential expression of one or more cDNAs in a sample containing nucleic acids, the method comprising: a) hybridizing the substrate of claim 7 with nucleic acids of the sample, thereby forming one or more hybridization complexes; b) detecting the hybridization complexes; and c) comparing the hybridization complexes with those of a standard, wherein differences between the standard and sample hybridization complexes indicate differential expression of cDNAs in the sample.
 9. The method of claim 8, wherein the nucleic acids of the sample are amplified prior to hybridization.
 10. The method of claim 8, wherein the sample is from a subject with diabetes and comparison with a standard allows monitoring of therapies for that disease.
 11. A method of screening a plurality of molecules or compounds to identify a ligand which specifically binds a cDNA, the method comprising: a) combining the combination of claim 1 with the plurality of molecules or compounds under conditions to allow specific binding; and b) detecting specific binding between each cDNA and at least one molecule or compound, thereby identifying a ligand that specifically binds to each cDNA.
 12. The method of claim 11 wherein the plurality of molecules or compounds are selected from DNA molecules, enhancers, mimetics, peptide nucleic acids, proteins, repressors, regulatory proteins, RNA molecules, and transcription factors.
 13. A vector containing the cDNA of claim
 12. 14. A host cell containing the vector of claim
 13. 15. A method for producing a protein, the method comprising the steps of: a) culturing the host cell of claim 14 under conditions for expression of protein; and b) recovering the protein from the host cell culture.
 16. A protein produced by the method of claim
 15. 17. A method for using a protein to screen a plurality of molecules or compounds to identify at least one ligand which specifically binds the protein, the method comprising: a) combining the protein encoded by a cDNA of claim 1 with the plurality of molecules or compounds under conditions to allow specific binding; and b) detecting specific binding between the protein and a molecule or compound, thereby identifying a ligand which specifically binds the protein.
 18. The method of claim 17 wherein the plurality of molecules or compounds is selected from agonists, antagonists, antibodies, DNA molecules, small molecule drugs, immunoglobulins, inhibitors, mimetics, peptide nucleic acids, peptides, pharmaceutical agents, proteins, RNA molecules, and ribozymes.
 19. A method of using a protein to produce an antibody, the method comprising: a) immunizing an animal with the protein encoded by a cDNA of claim 1 under conditions to elicit an antibody response; b) isolating animal antibodies; and c) screening the isolated antibodies with the protein, thereby identifying an antibody which specifically binds the protein.
 20. A antibody produced by the method of claim
 19. 